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December 2023 ESRFnews
BIO-IMAGING
M
ARCO di Michiel sees a lot of different
materials come to his beamline: battery
components, glasses, composites, sometimes
biominerals and cultural artefacts. What he very rarely
sees are soft biological samples. Composed of light
elements such as oxygen carbon and hydrogen these
are more or less invisible to the very highenergy Xray
beam that courses through the ID15A experimental
hutch Recently however di Michiel was asked to work
on a proposal by biologists at the University of Zurich
and ETH Zurich in Switzerland who were armed
with samples of human breast tumours tonsils and
appendixes As it turned out they really did need high
energy Xrays says di Michiel And in particular EBS
highenergy Xrays which have a very high flux
The reason was that the Zurich groups samples
were not purely biological Stained with various heavy
elements they were to be tests of a new biological imaging
technique, multi-element Z-tag X-ray fluorescence
(MEZ-XRF). The tests proved to be successful,
showing that MEZ-XRF could perform as well as other
leading comparable bio-imaging modalities, and with
the potential to perform much better. Non-destructive,
multiscale highspeed and able to identify at least
20 different tagged molecules at once it could help
scientists to understand in much greater detail which
types of tumours respond best to different types of
treatment There is even the possibility of making it 3D
We can look at up to 20 markers at the same time
across large tissue samples at high speed and in a non
destructive way even if the markers have low expression
says Merrick Strotton a first author on the study who is
now based at the UK research site of the multinational
biopharmaceutical company UCB Once weve looked
at the area in general and weve spotted the cells that
were interested in we can then zoom into specific
High-energy X-rays do not usually make much sense for
biological tissue samples, unless you are pioneering an entirely
new, EBS-enabled bio-imaging technique.
Bio-imaging, energised
Marco di Michiel helps researchers from Zurich test multi-element Z-tag X-ray fluorescence (MEZ-XRF).
E S R F/ S T E F C A N D É