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- Undergrowth Collagen Fibers Analysis by Fingerprint Enhancement Method doi link

Auteur(s): Manesco C., Cloitre T., Martin Fernandez M., Gerber Yannick Nicolas, Perrin Florence Evelyne, Saavedra O., Gergely C.

(Article) Publié: Biology Of The Cell, vol. 117 p. (2025)


Ref HAL: hal-05036983_v1
DOI: 10.1111/boc.70001
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé:

ABSTRACT Collagen is a key protein in mammals that maintains structural integrity within tissues. A failure in fibrillar collagen reorganization can induce cancer or fibrosis formation, such as in spinal cord injury (SCI), where the healing process after the initial trauma leads to the formation of scar tissue, which includes fibrosis. As there is no current treatment targeting the fibrotic process directly, a better understanding of collagen properties can thus help to apprehend malignant states. Characterization of collagen fibers has been widely explored on second‐harmonic generation (SHG) images, due to the label‐free nature of the SHG imaging technique. It has been performed with various fibers extraction methods such as curvelet transform (CT) implemented in the open‐source software CurveAlign. However, when it comes to investigating undergrowth collagen fibers (collagen fibers that are still under reorganization) as observed in SCI, the CT method becomes complex to tune for nonadvanced users in order to properly segment the fibers. To improve collagen detection in the case of undergrowth fibers, we propose a methodology based on the fingerprint enhancement (FP‐E) algorithm that requires fewer user input parameters and is less time‐consuming. Our method was extensively tested on SHG data from injured spinal cord samples. We obtained metrics that depicted changes in collagen organization over time, particularly a significant increase in fiber density, demonstrating the FP‐E algorithm was properly adapted to address the evolution of collagen properties after SCI. Besides the simpler tuning of the method compared to commonly used software, the combination with further characterization of the extracted fibers could lead to consider fibrillar collagen as a biomarker in diseases where fibers are under development. The FP‐E algorithm is provided in the article.