Fibre orientations in collagen-containing tissues revealed with computational scattered light imaging and polarimetric second harmonic generation microscopy

Journal Article (2026)
Author(s)

L. Ettema (TU Delft - ImPhys/Menzel group)

Viktoras Mažeika (Vilnius University)

Mehdi Alizadeh (University of Toronto, Vilnius University)

H. Abbasi (TU Delft - ImPhys/Menzel group, Erasmus MC)

Virginijus Barzda (University of Toronto, Vilnius University)

Miriam Menzel (TU Delft - ImPhys/Menzel group)

DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-30627-9 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2026
Language
English
Journal title
Scientific Reports
Issue number
1
Volume number
16
Article number
1047
Downloads counter
12
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Abstract

Collagen forms dense fibre networks in the human body, with the organisation directly influencing tissue mechanics and function in health and disease. A good understanding of this relation requires proper imaging techniques for visualising the dense collagen network. Previously, computational scattered light imaging was employed as a fast and easy-to-implement technique to retrieve the orientations of multi-directional fibres in various tissue samples, but the fibre orientations were not yet validated quantitatively in regions containing collagen fibres. In this study, we validate the in-plane orientations of fibres in collagen-containing tissues (rat tendon and bone sections) determined with computational scattered light imaging by performing comparative measurements with polarimetric second harmonic generation microscopy. For rat tendon, sections with and without hematoxylin-and-eosin staining, folded tendon layers, and obliquely cut sections were investigated. Similar fibre orientations were obtained with both techniques in both tissues, with the highest degree of similarity found for in-plane, unidirectional fibres in the tendon sections. The techniques were able to retrieve the orientations of multi-directional crossing fibres in folded rat tendon layers, and results were found to be unaffected by staining. While polarimetric second harmonic generation microscopy provides high resolution and ultrastructural information on collagen, computational scattered light imaging provides large field of view measurements with micrometre resolution.