RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Imaging the structure and dynamic activity of retinal microglia and macrophage-like cells in the living human eye JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 2022.04.30.490173 DO 10.1101/2022.04.30.490173 A1 Yuhua Rui A1 Daniel M.W. Lee A1 Min Zhang A1 Valerie C Snyder A1 Rashmi Raghuraman A1 Elena Gofas-Salas A1 Pedro Mecê A1 Sanya Yadav A1 Pavan Tiruveedhula A1 Kate Grieve A1 José-Alain Sahel A1 Marie-Hélène Errera A1 Ethan A. Rossi YR 2022 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/05/01/2022.04.30.490173.abstract AB Purpose We recently showed how a refined sequential detection pattern and image processing pipeline for multi-offset adaptive optics scanning light ophthalmoscopy (AOSLO) can increase the contrast of weakly scattering inner retinal structures, including microglia. However, sequential detection was still time-consuming, preventing dynamics from being monitored over short intervals (< 3 mins). Here we show that simultaneous fiber-bundle (FB) detection can overcomes this limitation to reveal the structure and dynamic activity of microglia and macrophage-like cells in healthy and diseased retinae.Methods We designed and implemented a custom 7-fiber optical FB with one central confocal fiber and six larger fibers for multi-offset detection in AOSLO at a single focal plane. We imaged the ganglion cell layer at several locations at multiple timepoints (from minutes to weeks) in 8 healthy participants and in 4 patients with ocular infections or inflammation, including ocular syphilis and posterior uveitis. Microglia and immune cells were manually segmented to quantify cell morphometry and motility.Results Fiber-bundle detection reduced single acquisition time to 20-30 seconds, enabling imaging over larger areas and monitoring of dynamics over shorter intervals. Presumed microglia in healthy retinas had an average diameter of 12.8 μm and with a spectrum of morphologies including circular cells and elongated cells with visible processes. We also detected the somas of putative macroglia, potentially astrocytes, near the optic nerve head. Microglia moved slowly in normal eyes (0.02μm/sec, on average) but speed increased in patients with active infections or inflammation (up to 2.37μm/sec). Microglia activity was absent in a patient with chronic uveitis that was quiescent but apparent over short intervals in an active uveitis retina. In a patient with ocular syphilis imaged at multiple timepoints during treatment, macrophage-like cells containing granular internal structures were seen. Decreases in the quantity and motility of these immune cells were correlated with improvements to vision and other structural and systemic biomarkers.Conclusions FB-AOSLO enable simplified optical setup with easy alignment and implementation. We imaged the fine-scale structure and dynamics of microglia and macrophage-like cells during active infection and inflammation in the living eye for the first time. In healthy eyes we also detected putative glia cell near the optic nerve head. FB-AOSLO offers promise as a powerful tool for detecting and monitoring retinal inflammation and infection in the living eye over short response to treatment.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.