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High-resolution label-free imaging reveals stable organelle dynamics and spatial organization

11.12.25 | University of Tsukuba

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Tsukuba, Japan—Cells contain various organelles, including the nucleus, which stores genetic information, and mitochondria, which generate the energy essential for biological processes. While these are "membranous organelles" enclosed by lipid bilayers, cells also contain "nonmembranous organelles" formed through molecular assembly without membrane encapsulation. The morphology, quantity, and spatial distribution of these organelles are crucial for maintaining cellular functions and determining cell fate.

Traditionally, fluorescence-based imaging has been the principal approach for visualizing organelles. However, this method has inherent limitations, including phototoxicity from intense illumination, photobleaching of fluorescent dyes, and restrictions on the number of structures that can be simultaneously observed. To overcome these challenges, phase contrast microscopy—which enables the visualization of transparent structures without the need for staining—has regained attention. Yet, conventional phase contrast techniques are prone to halo artifacts caused by diffraction.

In this study, the researchers used ExAPC microscopy, which incorporates an optical mechanism to suppress halo formation. This enabled high-resolution, label-free observation of multiple organelles, including nuclei, nucleoli, and mitochondria, during dynamic cellular events such as the cell cycle. Notably, for the first time, the researchers clearly visualized biomolecular condensate-like structures of unknown composition. Examination of lipid droplet growth, mitochondrial fission and fusion, and cellular responses to drugs revealed that while individual organelles display diverse behaviors (heterogeneity), the overall system maintains a high degree of order and stability (robustness).

These findings highlight ExAPC microscopy as a powerful tool for capturing biological dynamics in their native state. The technology holds significant potential for elucidating pathological conditions associated with altered organelle morphology, quantity, and spatial organization—such as cancer, metabolic disorders, and neurodegenerative diseases—and may contribute to the development of novel diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.

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This study was supported in part by a JSPS KAKENHI (22H02296), the Takeda Science Foundation (DGM06005J), JST COI-NEXT (JPMJPF2017), JST CREST (JPMJCR1927), and Cabinet Office, Government of Japan, Cross-ministerial Moonshot Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Research and Development Program, 'Technologies for Smart Bio-industry and Agriculture'(funding agency: Bio-oriented Technology Research Advancement Institution) (JPJ009237).

Title of original paper:
Label-free imaging of intracellular structures in living mammalian cells via external apodization phase-contrast microscopy

Journal:
The FEBS Journal

DOI:
10.1111/febs.70286

Assistant Professor OHNO, Hiroshi
Assistant Professor MIYAMOTO, Takafumi
Institute of Medicine, University of Tsukuba

Institute of Medicine

FEBS Journal

10.1111/febs.70286

Label-free imaging of intracellular structures in living mammalian cells via external apodization phase-contrast microscopy

17-Oct-2025

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

KAMOSHITA Kimio
University of Tsukuba
kohositu@un.tsukuba.ac.jp

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Tsukuba. (2025, November 12). High-resolution label-free imaging reveals stable organelle dynamics and spatial organization. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1WRP299L/high-resolution-label-free-imaging-reveals-stable-organelle-dynamics-and-spatial-organization.html
MLA:
"High-resolution label-free imaging reveals stable organelle dynamics and spatial organization." Brightsurf News, Nov. 12 2025, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1WRP299L/high-resolution-label-free-imaging-reveals-stable-organelle-dynamics-and-spatial-organization.html.