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Microscope Produces 3D Movies Of Live Cells |
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SciMed - Horizons | |
TS-Si News Service | |
Monday, 07 March 2011 15:00 | |
Bethesda, MD, USA. A new microscope uses an exquisitely thin sheet of light — similar to that used in supermarket bar-code scanners — to peer inside single living cells, revealing the three-dimensional shapes of cellular landmarks in unprecedented detail.
A major goal in biology is to understand the rules that control molecular processes inside a cell. A variety of new tools are available for this purpose, but observing cellular activity in real time remains primary. If one is trying to learn the rules of a game, it is better to have a movie of people playing the game than it is to have still photos — and the same is true for cells. Despite significant advances in microscopy over recent decades, many of the techniques still require that cells be killed and fixed at a static position for imaging. There is only so much one can learn from studying dead cells – the equivalent of still photos. The high speed technique, Bessel beam plane illumination microscopy, creates movies out of live images so that biological processes, such as cell division, can receive detailed scrutiny in near-real time. Adobe Flash Player not installed or older than 9.0.115! ![]() Bessel beam plane illumination microscope The new microscope creates movies out of images so that biological processes, such as cell division, can receive detailed scrutiny in near-real time. This video reveals the ever-changing surface of a HeLa cell, with long, thin projections called filopodia continually extending and retracting. A HeLa cell is one of the oldest and most commonly used human cell lines used in scientific research. It is an immortal, derived from cervical cancer cells taken from Henrietta Lacks (d., cancer, 4 October 1951). The technique uses Bessel functions, originally defined by the mathematician Daniel Bernoulli, with a followup by Friedrich Bessel, who first used them in 1817. The functions were critical to investigations of the motion of three bodies moving under mutual gravitation. Within a decade Bessel further developed Bessel functions to examine planetary perturbations. Video courtesy Eric Betzig at the Janelia Farm Research Campus of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI). Time: 00:00:07.The technique was invented by scientists at the Janelia Farm Research Campus of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) and is described in the journal Nature Methods. Eric Betzig, the Janelia Farm group leader, has been inventing and improving microscopes for more than 30 years. He wanted a microscope that would let researchers see the dynamic inner lives of living cells. The notion of studying live cells, stippled with fluorescently labeled proteins and other molecules, is not new. But live-cell techniques can be problematic. Light produced by microscopes can damage the cell over time. Besides cell damage, light causes the fluorescent molecules — of which there are only so many — to wink out over time. In other words, the longer you study the cell to uncover its properties, the more damage you do to the cell and the more likely you are to spend your "photon budget," Betzig says. What's more, the light of a microscope exposes more of the sample than just the small portion that is in focus. Illuminating the out-of-focus regions produces blur, making small intracellular features appear as lengthened blobs rather than sharp dots. "The question was, is there a way of minimizing the amount of damage you're doing so that you can then study cells in a physiological manner while also studying them at high spatial and temporal resolution for a long time?" Long before arriving at Janelia Farm in 2006, Betzig began thinking about ways to improve live-cell microscopy. He put those thoughts on hold while he focused on designing new microscopy techniques that would ultimately shatter the limits of spatial resolution (imposed by the laws of diffraction). Until recently, microscopes could see objects no smaller than 200 nanometers in size. Several years ago, Betzig and his Janelia Farm colleague Harald Hess invented photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM), which can produce images of objects only 10-20 nanometers in size. PALM and most other microscopes — even the ones college students use in their biology classes — work by exposing the sample through one objective lens and then collecting the light that comes back through that same lens. That approach causes light to damage the sample and induces blur, making it difficult to observe live cells. In 2008, Betzig began working on ways to overcome these challenges. One idea he had was to use plane illumination microscopy. First proposed about 100 years ago, plane illumination involves shining a sheet of light through the side of the sample rather than the top. To do that, microscopists use two different objective lenses that are perpendicular to one another. "Because you come from the side, plane illumination confines the excitation much closer to the part that's in focus," Betzig says. Although other researchers, including Janelia Farm Fellow Philipp Keller, have used plane illumination to great effect to study multicellular organisms hundreds of microns in size, the light sheets were still too thick to work effectively for imaging within single cells only tens of microns in size. The main problem is that the wide swath of light used in plane illumination exposed more of the cell than Betzig's group wanted. This caused excessive blur and light toxicity. Liang Gao, Thomas Planchon and Eric Betzig display their new Bessel beam plane illumination microscope at HHMI's Janelia Farm Research Campus.To circumvent this problem, his group used a Bessel beam, a special type of non-diffracting light beam studied by physicists in the late 1980s, and used today in applications including bar-code scanners in supermarkets. Sweeping the beam across the sample creates a thinner light sheet. Bessel beams behave a bit strangely, though, and this is what has kept Betzig's postdoctoral researchers — Thomas Planchon and Liang Gao — busy over the past few years. Although they produce a very narrow light beam, Bessel beams also create somewhat weaker light that flanks the focal point, making the pattern of illumination look like a bull's eye. The extra light lobes are a hindrance because they excite too much of the sample. Betzig's group used two tricks to compensate. The first was structured illumination; instead of continuously sweeping the beam, they turned it on and off rapidly, like firing a machine gun. This creates a periodic grating of excitation that can be used to eliminate any out-of-focus blur. (Structured illumination, as used by Janelia Farm Group Leader Mats Gustafsson, is also one of the ways to achieve super-resolution. Another strategy Betzig's group used is two-photon microscopy, a method commonly used in ![]() ![]() They then set out to image as fast as possible. The Bessel beam sweeps quickly through the sample, allowing the group to take nearly 200 images/second and build three-dimensional stacks from hundreds of two-dimensional images in one to 10 seconds. As they had hoped, they found that they could take hundreds of such three-dimensional image sets without harming the cell, generating amazing movies of cellular processes such as mitosis, where chromosomes divide as one cell becomes two. "There's no other technique that comes close to imaging as long with such high spatial and temporal detail," Betzig says. Last summer, as soon as they got their first live cell images, Betzig, Planchon and Gao packed up the new instrument in a rented sport utility vehicle and took it to the Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) in Massachusetts for a ![]() "We learned a lot about what works and what doesn't and ways to treat the cells in a way that maintains their physiological state while we're doing the imaging," he says. "Like every microscope, the instrumentation is only part of the puzzle. A lot of it is finding the right samples, and right preparation methods to make it work." The new microscope is also exciting because it may be used in the future to improve super-resolution microscopy. PALM and other super-resolution techniques are limited to looking at thin, dead samples, and can be very damaging when looking at live ones. "That's what's really great about the Bessel — we can confine that excitation and really start to think about applying super-resolution microscopy to study structure or dynamics in thicker cells," says Betzig. Even without super-resolution, Bessel beam plane illumination microscopy will be a powerful tool for cell biologists, Betzig says, since it noninvasively images the rapidly evolving three-dimensional complexity of cells. CitationRapid three-dimensional isotropic imaging of living cells using Bessel beam plane illumination. Thomas A Planchon, Liang Gao, Daniel E Milkie, Michael W Davidson, James A Galbraith, Catherine G Galbraith, Eric Betzig. Nature Methods 2011; ePub ahead of print. doi:10.1038/nmeth.1586
Abstract A key challenge when imaging living cells is how to noninvasively extract the most spatiotemporal information possible. Unlike popular wide-field and confocal methods, plane-illumination microscopy limits excitation to the information-rich vicinity of the focal plane, providing effective optical sectioning and high speed while minimizing out-of-focus background and premature photobleaching. Here we used scanned Bessel beams in conjunction with structured illumination and/or two-photon excitation to create thinner light sheets (<0.5 µm) better suited to three-dimensional (3D) subcellular imaging. As demonstrated by imaging the dynamics of mitochondria, filopodia, membrane ruffles, intracellular vesicles and mitotic chromosomes in live cells, the microscope currently offers 3D isotropic resolution down to ~0.3 µm, speeds up to nearly 200 image planes per second and the ability to noninvasively acquire hundreds of 3D data volumes from single living cells encompassing tens of thousands of image frames. Quote this article on your site To create link towards this article on your website, copy and paste the text below in your page. Preview :
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Last Updated on Monday, 07 March 2011 14:36 |