AUTHOR=Shanmugam Anandhan Santhosh , Spence Jeremy , Begum Farhana , Kaur Nimrat , Henderson Dana , Hombach-Klonisch Sabine , Klonisch Thomas TITLE=A customized affordable multiplexed immunofluorescence method visualizes early changes in the mouse brain microenvironment upon laser cytoreduction JOURNAL=Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience VOLUME=Volume 19 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/cellular-neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fncel.2025.1553058 DOI=10.3389/fncel.2025.1553058 ISSN=1662-5102 ABSTRACT=IntroductionMultiplex immunofluorescence (mIF) utilizes distinct fluorophore-conjugated antibodies to enable the simultaneous visualization and quantification of multiple protein targets within a single tissue section. mIF allows high-resolution spatial mapping of cellular phenotypes within the native tissue microenvironment (TME). mIF facilitates the comprehensive analysis of complex biological systems, such as brain tumors, immune cell infiltration, and tissue heterogeneity. Laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) is a minimally invasive, hyperthermia-based laser cytoreductive method for the treatment of surgically inaccessible brain tumors, treatment-resistant epilepsy, and radiation necrosis. Laser-induced heat causes tissue damage, vascular leakage, and the appearance of heat-induced neo-antigens. There is an urgent clinical need to understand the elusive immunomodulatory roles of LITT in the brain TME. We describe a versatile, affordable, and customizable mIF method for the spatial imaging of multiple early tissue responses in post-LITT mouse brain.MethodsWe have developed a customizable and affordable mIF protocol that uses standard histological and microscopy equipment to assess TME changes in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) mouse brain tissue sections. We combined mIF with a laser cytoreduction workflow that uses MRI to monitor laser-induced tissue damage in post-LITT normal and tumor murine brains. Multiplex IF on individual tissue sections enabled the simultaneous spatial image analysis of multiple cellular and molecular immunotargets, including resident brain cell responses and immune cell infiltration, as exemplified with a mouse brain TME on Day 10 post-LITT.ResultsWe combined our mIF imaging procedure with in-vivo targeted laser-induced hyperthermic brain tissue ablation on FFPE mouse brain sections on Day 10 post-LITT. This enabled the spatial visualization of activation states of resident brain cells and the emergence and distribution of diverse phagocytic immune cell populations at the post-LITT site.ConclusionMultiplex IF on mouse models of laser cytoablation treatment in non-tumor and tumor brains offers a significant advancement by aiding in our understanding of repair and immune responses in post-LITT brains. Our customizable mIF protocol is cost-effective and simultaneously investigates the spatial distribution of multiple immune cell populations and the activation states of different resident brain cells in the post-LITT brain.