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In addition to scientific collaborations with other research groups, LCAM works on the development of novel microscopic techniques that are essential for new biological research. New microscopic techniques are being developed in close collaboration with commercial companies.


Controled light exposure microscopy (CLEM): Reduced phototoxicity and photobleaching for long-term imaging series

Fluorescence microscopy of living cells has become an instrumentation of major importance in life science, microscopical research and bio-tech industry. Major limiting factors in live-cell imaging are phototoxicity and photobleaching. The most effective way to reduce phototoxicity and photobleaching is reducing the dose of illumination light. However, reduction of the dose of illumination implies reduction the number of detected photons and consequently reduction of image quality. To circumvent this law, we have recently developed a completely new approach of imaging in microscopy: Controlled Light Exposure Microscopy (CLEM).
 
CLEM strongly reduces the illumination light dose without compromising image quality. A substantial (5-10 fold) reduction of phototoxicity and photobleaching is achieved by applying CLEM in confocal microscopy (Hoebe et.al, Nature Biotechnology, 2007). The basic concept of CLEM is to control light exposure for every individual picture element in order to obtain optimal signal-to-noise characteristics. CLEM has been implemented in a confocal laser scanning microscope and has been commercialised by Nikon. Currently, we are developing CLEM further for wide-field microscopy, high resolution microscopy and we will exploit CLEM in order to increase fluorescence detection sensitivity in confocal microscopy by a factor of 50 to 100.

for more info contact Prof. Dr. Erik Manders

 

Fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy (FFS) to perform quantitative microscopy

One of the most intriguing challenges in life sciences is to understand how a complex mixture of molecular particles and structures can make up a living cell. Despite the immense number of studies still much is unknown about the molecular basis of numerous biological processes such as cell proliferation, differentiation, intra- and extra-cellular communication and apoptosis. To increase our understanding about the complexity of these processes in living cells, experimental and especially quantitative data on the spatial-temporal organization is required. Fluorescence based techniques are ideal tools for this type of studies.

Fluorescence Fluctuation Spectroscopy (FFS) is a family of fluorescence techniques that is capable of detecting concentration, dynamics and interactions of fluorescent particles down to the single-molecule level and, if desired, in the living cell. We are applying, optimizing and expanding FFS techniques like FCCS, PCH, PIE-FLCS, stICS and RICS to describe signal transduction pathways, like the Galpha signaling pathway quantitatively. Thereto, the proteins of interest are genetically labeled with the various color- and lifetime variants of the green fluorescent protein (partly developed in our laboratory) expressed in living cells and studied by advanced fluorescence microscopes. 

for more info contact Dr. Mark Hink




High resolution microscopy

It is well known that there is a spatial limit to which light can focus: approximately half of the wavelength of the light you are using. But this is not a true barrier, because this diffraction limit is only true in the far-field and localization precision can be increased with many photons and careful analysis. The image of a point source on a microscope detector is called the point-spread function (PSF), which is limited by diffraction to be approximately half the wavelength of the light. But it is possible to simply fit that PSF with a Gaussian to locate the center of the PSF, and thus the location of the fluorophore with a much higher accuracy

Betzig et al. (Science) developed photo-activated localization microscopy (PALM) while Zhuang and co-workers used a similar technique called stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM). In both techniques samples filled with many dark fluorophores are imaged. The dyes can be photoactivated into a fluorescing state by a flash of light. Because photoactivation is stochastic, only a few, well separated molecules "turn on". Then Gaussians are fit to their PSFs in order to localize the centre of the particle. After the few bright molecules photobleach (sometimes actively by using another differently colored excitation source), the next flash of the photoactivating light activates random fluorophores again and the PSFs are fit of these different molecules. This process is repeated many times, building up an image. Because the molecules were switched on-and-off (and thus localized) at different times, the 'resolution' of the final image can be much higher than that limited by diffraction. We are currently setting up a PALM microscope and applying this technique to study signal transduction pathways
 
for more info contact Prof. Dr. Dorus Gadella

 

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