Science
Correlative SHG-AFM imaging workflow for label-free quantitative analysis of collagen structure-function relationships
Key Points
We present a user-friendly correlative second harmonic generation (SHG) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging workflow for quantifying the nanomechanical properties of collagen in unfixed, unlabeled tissue sections. SHG Aligned Profiling for Elasticity and Segmentation or SHAPES utilizes SHG imaging to guide AFM force mapping, enabling label-free, anatomically specific selection of regions of interest, facilitating spatially resolved characterization of fibrous collagen morphology and...
We present a user-friendly correlative second harmonic generation (SHG) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging workflow for quantifying the nanomechanical properties of collagen in unfixed, unlabeled tissue sections. SHG Aligned Profiling for Elasticity and Segmentation or SHAPES utilizes SHG imaging to guide AFM force mapping, enabling label-free, anatomically specific selection of regions of interest, facilitating spatially resolved characterization of fibrous collagen morphology and local stiffness. Compared to brightfield or confocal contrast-guided AFM mapping, SHG improves anatomical specificity without fixation or staining, enabling downstream analysis on the same tissue section while preserving spatial correspondence between structural (SHG) and mechanical (AFM) data. Rapid identification of regions of interest also reduces the risk of costly AFM tip breakage, improving throughput and reducing operator burden. Utilizing only standard turn-key commercial systems common in many user facilities and clinical laboratories, multimodal image coregistration and automated identification of anatomical regions of interest are employed to integrate SHG and AFM datasets across complex sample topographies. Coregistration of SHG and AFM images substantially increases the number of usable datasets per measurement session, facilitating translation of these complementary modalities and bridging nanomechanical imaging with clinical research practice.