Past Seminars (2014-Present)
Seminars in 2024
Tuesday, June 11, 2024 at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Speaker: Dr. Simona Patange (NIST). “Evaluation of Fluid Force Microscopy (FluidFM) for genome editing in single cells”
Genome editing is a rapidly evolving biotechnology with the potential to transform many sectors of industry. To introduce genome editing biomolecules into cells, one must use a reagent delivery method that could either manipulate cells in bulk or at the single-cell level. In this talk, I present our results using the ‘FluidFM OMNIUM,’ a single-cell manipulation technology with applications for genome editing. I give an overview of the U.S. NIST Genome Editing Program and present our data on the OMNIUM measurement capabilities, including the ability to perform targeted single-cell injections, single-cell isolations, and 1-2 picoliter cytoplasmic extractions. Our research with FluidFM technology builds upon guidance from our recent publication (Patange and Maragh 2022) in which we summarize technologies related to research applications where it is advantageous to have controlled reagent delivery and high-resolution data on the distribution of genomic and phenotypic outcomes of individual cells within a population.
Reference: Patange S, Maragh S. Fire Burn and Cauldron Bubble: What Is in Your Genome Editing Brew? ACS Biochemistry 2022, Article ASAP.
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.2c00431
Tuesday, May 21, 2024 at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Dr. Fernando Stefani (CIBION, Buenos Aires). “Fluorescence nanoscopy with sub-10 nm resolution”
Super-resolution fluorescence microscopy, also known as fluorescence nanoscopy, represented a breakthrough for bioimaging as it delivers sub-diffraction resolution using far-field microscopes. Although they do not face any fundamental limit, the resolution of the first generation of methods was bound by the limited photostability of fluorophores under ambient conditions to about 10-30 nm resolution. This has motivated the development of a second generation of fluorescence nanoscopy methods that aim to surpass sub-10 nm resolutions, thus providing true molecular resolution. In this talk, I will present the latest efforts of our lab to address this challenge trough four different approaches: pulsed-interleaved MINFLUX1, SIMPLER2, STED-FRET3, and RASTMIN4.
1. Masullo, L. A. et al. Pulsed Interleaved MINFLUX. Nano Lett. 21, 840–846 (2021).
2. Szalai, A. M. et al. Three-dimensional total-internal reflection fluorescence nanoscopy with nanometric axial resolution by photometric localization of single molecules. Nat. Commun. 12, 517 (2021).
3. Szalai, A. M. et al. Super-resolution Imaging of Energy Transfer by Intensity-Based STED-FRET. Nano Lett. 21, 2296–2303 (2021).
4. Masullo, L. A. et al. An alternative to MINFLUX that enables nanometer resolution in a confocal microscope. Light Sci. Appl. 11, 199 (2022).
Tuesday, April 16, 2024 at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Dr. C-H Bear Huang (Johns Hopkins Med Sch). “Decoding Cellular Conversations: Unveiling Complex Signaling Networks with Multiplexed Biosensor Barcoding”
The survival of cells depends on their ability to properly respond to signals from other cells and the environment, mediated by a complex network of signaling molecules. The feedback loops in signaling networks give rise to dynamic spatiotemporal patterns that serve crucial functional roles. Our research is focused on how the dynamic behavior of the RTK/Ras/PI3K/ERK signaling network regulates cellular processes such as migration, proliferation, and metabolism. By employing a new method for highly multiplexed tracking of signaling activities in live cells, we provide insights into the regulatory mechanisms of signaling networks and the effects of oncogenic mutations. Our methodology and findings have implications for elucidating the structure and function of signaling networks in cancer and other diseases.
Tuesday, February 20, 2024 at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Dr. Anthony Asmar (NIST). “Development of the Wide Scale Digital Optical Microscopy (WSDOM) laboratory for high throughput single cell tracking and analysis of iPSCs”
The ability to quantitatively image induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to monitor their state of pluripotency and differentiation in a non-invasive manner is important for establishing better metrics for pluripotency, and to assure consistency and efficiency in iPSC manufacturing. We have developed an imaging and image analysis pipeline that allows tens of thousands of individual iPSCs and their progeny to be segmented and tracked over multiple cell divisions using phase contrast microscopy at high temporal resolution. Our imaging pipeline allows interrogating individual cells both spatially and temporally resulting in the ability to assess, in a non-invasive manner, rates of mitosis and cell division in up to hundreds of thousands of cells in culture, which serve as indicators of cell state and cell health. Our pipeline uses a 2D convolutional neural network (U-Net) plus a 3D U-Net applied on time lapse images to detect and segment nuclei, mitotic events, and daughter nuclei to enable tracking of large numbers of individual cells over long times in culture. To reduce the burden and time for creating new AI models, we utilized automated fluorescence reference data for segmenting nuclei and detecting mitotic events in phase contrast images which precludes the need for manual annotation. We optimize and evaluate the accuracy of automated annotation to assure the reliability of the training, and we examine how some of the features of the AI model and image processing influence the apparent accuracy of the inferenced results. The development of a pipeline for continuous monitoring on a large scale requires configuration of multiple systems beyond the microscope including AI development, data storage, data transfer, data processing, computational capabilities, automation, and data visualization. We explore and address these aspects in the development of our laboratory which we have named the Wide Scale Digital Optical Microscopy (WSDOM) laboratory.
Seminars in 2023
Tuesday, December 12, 2023 at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Dr. Martin Pauli (U Wuerzburg, Germany). “Freezing Life: SMLM Nanotopology in high pressure frozen physiological sample”
Presynaptic active zones (AZs) are key structures for mediating and regulating neurotransmitter release. Although the key molecular components of AZs have been known for many years, their nanotopology and molecular dynamics remain elusive. Using single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) we could show that synaptic homeostasis involves subtle changes in AZ- nanotopology.
SMLM techniques are based on Immunofluorescence labelling and mostly used in aldehyde-fixed tissue. Cryofixation techniques, such as high-pressure freezing (HPF) and freeze substitution (FS), are widely used for ultrastructural studies in electron microscopy (EM). HPF/FS demonstrated nearer-to-native preservation of AZ ultrastructure. We established a protocol that adopted HPF/Fs techniques to fit the requirements SMLM. We could demonstrate that presynaptic AZs are smaller in HPF samples showing a well-preserved structure, that allowed the analysis of subclusters.
Tuesday, October 17, 2023 at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Dr. Sandra Vidak (NIH/NCI). “The role of molecular chaperones in a premature ageing disease”
Human aging is the biggest risk factor for many diseases including cancer, cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases. Since several human premature aging syndromes are characterized by features resembling normal aging, they provide important insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying human aging. One such disease is Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria Syndrome (HGPS), an extremely rare premature aging disorder reflecting several aspects of normal aging. Classical HGPS is caused by a de novo heterozygous mutation in the LMNA gene encoding A-type lamins, major structural components of the cell nucleus. The HGPS-linked LMNA mutation leads to the expression of a mutant lamin A termed progerin, which causes numerous nuclear and cellular defects, including post-transcriptional reduction of select cellular proteins, pointing to an effect of the disease-causing progerin protein on protein homeostasis. To test this hypothesis, we have analyzed the levels and localization of several major cellular chaperones by high-throughput imaging. In inducible GFP-progerin and in patient-derived HGPS fibroblasts several endoplasmic reticulum (ER) chaperones localize at the nuclear periphery where they co-localize with the nuclear protein progerin. This re-localization is accompanied by the activation of an adaptive response to ER stress in vitro and in vivo, including an increase in various ER chaperones and transcriptional activation of Unfolded Protein Response (UPR). Interestingly, induction of ER stress is dependent on the inner nuclear membrane protein SUN2 and its ability to cluster in the nuclear membrane. Our observations suggest that the presence of nuclear protein aggregates can be sensed and signaled to the ER lumen via immobilization and clustering of an inner nuclear membrane protein. These results identify a novel mechanism of communication between the nucleus and the ER and they provide insight into the molecular disease mechanisms of HGPS.
Tuesday, September 19, 2023 at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Dr. Ben Donovan (NIH/NCI). “Real-Time Visualization of Spliceosome Assembly in Live Cells”
Among the first steps of spliceosome assembly is 3’ splice site (3’SS) recognition by the U2AF heterodimer. However, U2AF binds pervasively throughout the entire pre-mRNA. A long intron, for example, may contain nearly a hundred U2AF binding sites. Considering this, we sought to uncover the characteristics of U2AF binding that lead to productive spliceosome assembly at the correct location. Surprisingly, in vitro high throughput binding assays indicate that 3’SSs contain low-affinity U2AF binding sites, indicating that sequence alone does not impart the specificity required for accurate splice site selection. Despite this narrow distribution of RNA binding affinities, we observe a broad distribution of U2AF dwell times in live-cell single-molecule tracking assays which we show, through a combination of complementary in vitro and in vivo single-molecule assays, reflects a wide range of processes, from initial binding site sampling to involvement in spliceosome assembly. Importantly, these experiments establish an approach to uncover the kinetic regulation of splice site selection (from the E- to the A-complex) on endogenous pre-mRNAs and suggest a model where specificity is refined as the spliceosome progresses towards the A-complex. Therefore, we sought to identify additional factors that may interact with U2AF to influence the specificity and kinetics of spliceosome assembly. U2AF IP-MS identifies DDX42, an RNA helicase that competes with the helicase DDX46 to bind the SF3B1 component of the U2 snRNP. Interestingly in orbital tracking assays, where U2AF binding and pre-mRNA splicing are observed simultaneously, DDX42 knockdown stabilizes U2AF binding while DDX46 knockdown destabilizes binding. Together, these results provide new insight into how U2AF binding is interrogated during spliceosome assembly to ensure highly specific 3’SS recognition.
Tuesday, June 20, 2023 at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Alexander Peterson, PhD and Edward Kwee, PhD (NIST). “Quantifying viral vector heterogeneity through biophysical and infectivity assay imaging”
Characterization of viruses is critical for the development of gene delivery therapies and pandemic preparedness. We will present two applications of imaging to characterize gene delivery particle heterogeneity and quantify SARS-CoV-2 serum neutralization. First, we introduce a novel light scattering technique, interferometric dark-field total internal reflection microscopy to measure mass, size, and concentration of individual gene delivery particles to provide a multi-attribute comprehensive characterization of critical particle metrics to help characterize and enable a deeper understanding of their heterogeneity. We observe that different manufactured viral vector particles exhibited distinct mass profiles, suggesting potential differences in their structural composition or cargo content. Additionally, we observed a potential correlation between viral vector mass and infectivity, with heavier particles displaying enhanced infectivity compared to lighter counterparts. Second, we developed a cell based pseudovirus neutralization assay that measured neutralization by live cell imaging and flow cytometry. For live cell imaging, brightfield and fluorescence microscopy was performed on serum samples incubated with pseudotype particles expressing the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and target cells. Image processing and analysis enabled quantification of infection and neutralization dynamics. The pseudovirus neutralization assay demonstrated reliable performance for detecting varying degrees of neutralization against SARS-CoV-2 in patient serum samples, with good agreement between live cell imaging and flow cytometry readouts.Together, these imaging approaches can provide a holistic approach to characterize virus heterogeneity with single particle characterization and infectivity quantification.
Tuesday, May 16, 2023 at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Dr. Steve Presse (Arizona State U). “Bayesian methods for FISH and single photon smFRET analysis”
Biological processes are directed by molecular actors conspiring, often in small numbers, to achieve tasks relevant to life. Yet these actors are not directly observable. Within the fluorescence paradigm, multiple layers of stochasticity lie between what we care about (molecular actor behavior) and what we observe (detector counts). These layers include, but are not limited to, optical aberrations, detector noise, and photo-physics. As a direct consequence, we have been limited as a community to superresolving the positions of static molecules and obtaining snapshots of otherwise dynamical events. Here we present a probabilistic framework starting from single spot confocal and generalizing to widefield to demonstrate how we can leverage the statistics of the stochasticity to achieve superresolved tracking in crowded environments.
Tuesday, April 18, 2023 at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Dr. Greta Babakhanova (NIST). “Measuring cell viability with imaging-based methods and in 3D scaffolds”
In the field of tissue engineering, 3D scaffolds and cells are often combined to yield constructs that are used as therapeutics to repair or restore tissue function in patients. Viable cells are often required to achieve the intended mechanism of action for the therapy, where the live cells may build new tissue or may release factors that induce tissue regeneration. Thus, there is a need to reliably measure cell viability in 3D scaffolds as a quality attribute of a tissue-engineered medical product. We developed a noninvasive, label-free, 3D optical coherence tomography (OCT) method to rapidly (2.5 min) image large sample volumes (1 mm3) to assess cell viability and distribution within scaffolds. OCT imaging was assessed using a model scaffold-cell system consisting of a polysaccharide-based hydrogel seeded with human Jurkat cells. Four test systems were used: hydrogel seeded with live cells, hydrogel seeded with heat-shocked or fixed dead cells and hydrogel without any cells. Time series OCT images demonstrated changes in the time-dependent speckle patterns due to refractive index (RI) variations within live cells that were not observed for pure hydrogel samples or hydrogels with dead cells. The changes in speckle patterns were used to generate live-cell contrast by image subtraction. In this way, objects with large changes in RI were binned as live cells. Using this approach, on average, OCT imaging measurements counted 326 ± 52 live cells per 0.288 mm3 for hydrogels that were seeded with 288 live cells (as determined by the acridine orange-propidium iodide cell counting method prior to seeding cells in gels). Considering the substantial uncertainties in fabricating the scaffold-cell constructs, such as the error from pipetting and counting cells, a 13% difference in the live-cell count is reasonable. Additionally, the 3D distribution of live cells was mapped within a hydrogel scaffold to assess the uniformity of their distribution across the volume. Our results demonstrate a real-time, noninvasive method to rapidly assess the spatial distribution of live cells within a 3D scaffold that could be useful for assessing tissue-engineered medical products.
Tuesday, March 21, 2023 at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Dr. Kaustubh Wagh (NIH/NCI). “Single-molecule tracking reveals dynamic switching between two low-mobility states for chromatin and chromatin-bound transcriptional regulators”
How transcription factors (TFs) navigate the complex nuclear environment to assemble the transcriptional machinery at specific genomic loci remains elusive. Using single-molecule tracking, coupled with machine learning, we examined the mobility of multiple transcriptional regulators. We show that H2B and ten different transcriptional regulators display the same two low-mobility states. This suggests that, on our imaging timescales, we can study the dynamics of transcriptional regulators when they are bound to chromatin. Ligand activation results in a dramatic increase in the proportion of steroid receptors in the lowest mobility state. Mutational analysis revealed that only chromatin interactions in the lowest mobility state require an intact DNA-binding domain as well as oligomerization domains. Importantly, these states are not spatially separated as previously believed but in fact, individual molecules can dynamically switch between them. Together, our results identify two unique and distinct low-mobility states of chromatin-bound transcriptional regulators that appear to represent common pathways for transcription activation in mammalian cells.
Tuesday, February 21, 2023, at 11 AM, ZOOM
Speaker: Dr. Yihan Wan (Westlake U, Hangzhou, China). “Single Cell Tracking of Orchestrated Transcription Dynamics During Stem Cell Fate Decision”
Transcription is a sporadic and stochastic process. Our previous study proved that the abundance and identity of mRNA molecules in a single cell are dynamic features. However, the stringent regulation in development and the stochasticity of gene expression seems to be a paradox. How do the sporadic transcription and stochastic splicing dynamics coordinate with lineage commitment? Here, I will present our preliminary data to elucidate the nascent RNA dynamics during human embryonic stem cell fate decisions. Through Fucci-assisted cell cycle tracking, barcoding mediated genome-wide nascent RNA dynamic tracking, we aim to reveal the real-time dynamics of global gene expression during the lineage commitment process.
Tuesday, January 17, 2023
Speaker: Dr. Andrew Moore (HHMI/ Janelia). “Vimentin Intermediate Filaments (IFs) Play a Role in Clustering and Stabilizing Matrices of Peripheral ER Tubules”
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a continuous membrane-bound organelle found in all eukaryotes. In cultured cells, the ER adopts an elaborate net-like organization characterized by densely stacked sheets in the perinuclear region, sparsely interconnected tubules in the cell periphery, and a complex mixture of sheets and tubule matrices therebetween. Whilst the factors controlling the sheet/tubule balance have been extensively examined, the mechanisms by which these geometries are spatially segregated within the cytoplasm are not well understood. In this talk, I will outline our efforts to investigate the mechanism of ER positioning in cultured cells and focus on an unexpected role for vimentin intermediate filaments (IFs) in clustering and stabilizing matrices of peripheral ER tubules
Seminars in 2022
Tuesday, December 13, 2022
Speaker: Dr. Roberto Weigert (NIH / NCI). “Imaging Tumor Initiation and Progression in Live Animals at Cellular and Subcellular Resolution”
Intravital Microscopy is a powerful tool to image the dynamics of a variety of biological processes in live animals across scales, ranging from tissue, individual cells, and subcellular compartments.
Here, we will show how this technology can be applied to study at an unprecedented level of resolution the initiation and progression of tumor lesions within the same animal. The combination of 1) genetically engineered mice expressing a variety of fluorescently tagged molecules which highlight selected cell populations or subcellular compartments, and 2) the ability of non-linear microscopy to excite endogenous molecules such as NADH and FAD, or collagen I via second harmonic generation provide an unique way to follow the transformation of epithelial cells during tumor progression, their metabolic reprogramming, and the role of immune cells and the tumor microenvironment. Finally, examples of potential applications for the use of non-linear microcopy in diagnostics will be presented.
Tuesday, November 8, 2022
Speaker: Dr. Edouard Bertrand (IGH, CNRS, Montpellier U, France). “Single Molecule Imaging Reveals a New Mechanism for RNA Transport and Location Translation”
Local translation allows for a spatial control of gene expression. Here, we performed RNA localization screen using high-throughput smFISH and discovered mRNAs locally translated at unexpected locations, including cytoplasmic protrusions, cell edges, endosomes, the Golgi apparatus, the nuclear envelope and centrosomes. Surprisingly, mRNA localization frequently required ongoing translation, indicating widespread co-translational RNA targeting. We also discovered that several mRNAs accumulated in foci distinct from P-bodies, which served as specialized translation sites, i.e. translation factories. Most interestingly, we found a conserved family of mRNAs that localize to centrosomes in both human and drosophila cells. These mRNAs localize to centrosomes at different stages of the cell cycle and some also localize to cilia in quiescent cells. Drug treatments and reporter analyses revealed that mRNA localization required translation of the nascent protein in cis. Moreover, using ASPM and NUMA1 as models, single mRNA and polysome imaging revealed active movements of endogenous polysomes towards the centrosome at the onset of mitosis, when these mRNAs start localizing. These data identify a conserved family of centrosomal mRNAs, which localize by a novel mechanism involving active polysome transport mediated by nascent proteins.
Tuesday, October 18, 2022
Speaker: Dr. Jiji Chen (NIH / NIBIB). “Deep Learning to Denoise and Enhance Resolution for Super Resolution Imaging”
To obtain quality data in bioimaging, one needs to compromise between spatial resolution, temporal resolution, and signal to noise. It is difficult to optimize one factor without affecting the other two. To overcome these barriers, traditional methods including spatial filtering, wavelet thresholding, deconvolution, etc. have been used but typically cannot recover images to the desired level. Deep learning-based methods have shown very promising growth in image processing, analysis, and resolution enhancement. This talk will describe recent work we have done to develop a 3D residual channel attention network (3D RCAN) that enables simultaneous denoising and deconvolution of image volumes that is competitive with other state-of-the-art neural networks. 3D-RCAN allows us to acquire tens of thousands of images without apparent photobleaching, enhance confocal images to STED resolution, and iSIM images to expansion microscopy resolution. We have also integrated the 3D RCAN deep learning pipeline with a new 4 beam 3D SIM, enabling 120 nm isotropic resolution without using the reflected beam. 3D-RCAN and the 4beam 3D SIM are now available at the trans-NIH Advanced Imaging and Microscopy (AIM) Resource. AIM provides support for general image computation including software/pipeline development, large data visualization, high-performance computing, and AI assisted image segmentation/denoising.
Tuesday, May 17, 2022
Speaker: Dr. Carsen Stringer (HHMI, Janelia). “Cellpose 2.0: How to Train Your Own Model”
Generalist models for cellular segmentation, like Cellpose, provide good out-of-the-box results for many types of images. However, such models do not allow users to adapt the segmentation style to their specific needs and may perform sub-optimally for test images that are very different from the training images. Here we introduce Cellpose 2.0, a new package which includes an ensemble of diverse pretrained models as well as a human-in-the-loop pipeline for quickly prototyping new specialist models. We show that specialist models pretrained on the Cellpose dataset can achieve state-of-the-art segmentation on new image categories with very little user-provided training data. Models trained on 500-1000 segmented regions-of-interest (ROIs) performed nearly as well as models trained on entire datasets with up to 200,000 ROIs. A human-in-the-loop approach further reduced the required user annotations to 100-200 ROIs, while maintaining state-of-the-art segmentation performance. This approach enables a new generation of specialist segmentation models that can be trained on new image types with only 1-2 hours of user effort. We provide software tools including an annotation GUI, a model zoo and a human-in-the-loop pipeline to facilitate the adoption of Cellpose 2.0.
Tuesday, April 19, 2022
Speaker: Dr. Michael W. Halter (NIST). “Quantitative Live Imaging of Pluripotent Cells to Probe Gene Regulatory Networks”
Induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) populations are complex, dynamic and heterogeneous. Individual cells within a population are constantly changing all while maintaining the capacity to differentiate into numerous possible cell types. Time lapse imaging of live pluripotent stem cells can be used to follow the large numbers of individual cells over time, but the analysis of images necessary to segment and track single cells is challenging. Image analysis based on deep learning algorithms is dramatically improving the capability for obtaining dynamic information from single cells. Our work focuses on using fluorescent protein reporters to monitor the dynamics of gene expression, but the label-free image analysis pipelines are potentially very general. This talk will discuss 1) measuring a modeling gene expression dynamics in single cells, 2) measurement assurance strategies for single cell dynamics from time lapse images, and 3) the development of high speed imaging systems that can generate training and testing data for the analytical pipelines will be discussed.
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
Speaker: Dr. David J. Nesbitt (U. Colorado, Boulder). “Kinetics and Thermodynamics of Nuclear Acid Folding: ‘Raising the Bar’ for Real Time Studies at the Single Molecule Level”
The ability to look with laser microscopy at single biomolecules has led to a revolution in research opportunities for chemistry, physics and molecular biology. This talk will present three “vignettes” with the common theme of confocal microscopy, fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), and single photon counting methods for single molecule kinetics and thermodynamics of conformational RNA folding into biocompetent structures. (1) Exquisite temperature control in single molecule “nanobathtubs” is used to permit systematic deconstruction of free energies landscapes (ΔG0) into enthalpic (ΔH0) and entropic (-TΔS0) components, as well as begin to elucidate properties of transition state barriers (e.g., ΔH‡, ΔS‡) for folding/unfolding. (2) the effect of molecular “crowding” on RNA/DNA loop/stem formation and hybridization at the single molecule level, in order to explore conditions relevant to in vivo crowding in the cellular cytoplasm. (3) recent extensions of these methods into the kinetics and thermodynamics of folding/unfolding at high hydrostatic pressures (Pext = 1-4000bar), which allows one to interrogate the impact of sequence, mono/divalent cations, ligands, osmolytes, etc. on stabilities and free volumes (ΔV0, ΔV‡) for nucleic acid folding. A unifying goal in these vignettes is the development of simple physical pictures to help us interpret, explain, and potentially control the underlying biophysics of nucleic acid folding at the single molecule level.
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
Speaker: Dr. Stephen A Boppart (U Illinois, Urbana Champaign). “Imaging for Biomarkers of Cancer using Simultaneous Label-free Auto-fluorescence Multi-harmonic (SLAM) Microscopy”
Innovations in biomedical imaging have historically led to discoveries in the life sciences and new detection and diagnostic technologies in medicine and surgery. Label-free intravital optical imaging and imaging of fresh, unstained, resected tissue specimens, offers a wealth of new biomarkers for revealing the true colors of cancer and diagnosing disease. Using new optical source technology and nonlinear optics to generate new excitation wavelengths and manipulate the light stimulus in new ways, Simultaneous Label-free Auto-fluorescence Multi-harmonic (SLAM) microscopy can achieve fast simultaneous visualization of the rich intrinsic molecular and metabolic features within tissues. Quantitative machine/deep learning analyses of these multi-dimensional datasets can be used to identify selective biomarkers for cancer. Specifically, tumor-associated extracellular vesicles (EVs) were analyzed via their optical signatures and spatial distributions. Analysis showed that EVs from the tumor microenvironment have unique optical signatures, in comparison to those from healthy subjects. The clinical demonstration of these optical biomedical imaging technologies offers new paradigms for point-of-procedure diagnosis and guidance.
Tuesday, January 18, 2022
Speaker: Dr. Matthew L. Ferguson (Boise State U). Real Time Single Molecule Live Cell Measurement of Gene Activation by 3D Orbital Tracking Fluorescence Cross Correlation Spectroscopy”
Mechanisms of transcription and translation take the information encoded in the genome and make it “work” in cells, through the production of proteins defined by nucleic acid coding regions. This involves the coordination of many multi-subunit complexes about which most knowledge is inferred from ensemble and/or in vitro assays, giving a detailed but static picture. How these macromolecular machines coordinate in living cells remains unknown but recent advances in the application of fluctuation analysis to time resolved multi-color fluorescence imaging can now give an unprecedented level of dynamic in vivo information. My talk will describe recent applications of 3D Orbital Tracking and Fluorescence Cross Correlation Spectroscopy to the study of transcriptional activation in living cells and outline possible future applications. Orbital tracking provides faster sampling and longer measurements than traditional microscopy, while minimizing photobleaching. Using these methods, we are able to begin to understand and model the living genome.
Seminars in 2021
Tuesday, December 14, 2021
Speaker: Dr. Boyang Hua (Johns Hopkins MI). “Monitoring co-transcriptional RNA folding in real time with smFRET”
We develop an RNA polymerase-free assay to capture the “essence” of co-transcriptional RNA folding process. Combining this assay with the powerful single-molecule FRET techniques, we observe how individual ribozymes and riboswitches choose their fold and make regulatory decisions in real time. The lessons learnt from these observations help us tease out the effects of different rate parameters in the kinetically-controlled folding regime.
Tuesday, November 9, 2021
Speaker: Dr. Jadranka Lonkarek (NIH/NCI). “Combining various super resolution approaches to decipher centrosome organization”
Centrosomes are small, ~500 nm in diameter, multifunctional membrane-less organelles, that are critically important for development, signaling and cell- and organ- homeostasis, and proper chromosome segregation during mitosis. Centrosomes were first described by Edouard Van Beneden and named and linked to chromosome segregation by Theodor Boveri around 1870. In the 1960-1980s, electron microscopy studies have unraveled the remarkable nine-fold symmetrical ultrastructure of a centriole — a microtubular cylindrical structure that resides within a centrosome and organizes it. Abut 15 years ago, proteomics and genomic screens identified hundreds of centriole and centrosome core proteins and revealed the evolutionary highly conserved nature of the centriole assembly pathway across multiple organisms. Nowadays, super resolution microscopy approaches and improvements in cryo-tomography are enabling us to build a nanoscale-detailed picture of the centriole and centrosome architecture. In this seminar, I will present our efforts to combine various super resolution methods to decipher intra-centrosomal organization of a human centrosome and to understand how centrosomal dynamic localization of various centrosomal proteins affects centriole and centrosome cycle and function.
Tuesday, October 19, 2021
Speaker: Dr. Krishna Mudumbi (Yale Cancer Biol Inst). “EGFR dimerization and phosphorylation by single-molecule microscopy”
Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is a single-pass transmembrane protein and a member of the receptor tyrosine kinase family of proteins that is critically involved in the regulation many cellular pathways. EGFR is comprised of five major domains: the extracellular ligand binding domain, transmembrane domain, intracellular juxtamembrane domain, kinase domain, and the tyrosine residue containing C-tail. Ligand binding induces dimerization of EGFR, which is believed to be the key step in receptor activation and signaling. Previous work has shown that receptor mobility can be used to determine monomeric and dimeric states of the receptor – with a reduction in diffusivity as a readout for dimerization. However, it is unclear how other cellular factors, such as phosphorylation and adaptor protein recruitment, may contribute to this change in receptor mobility. Furthermore, each of the five major domains of EGFR have been previously shown to play a role in the dimerization of the receptor, but the relative contribution of each element to EGFR dimerization is unknown. Using several single-molecule microscopy techniques, we monitored the contribution of phosphorylation, adaptor protein recruitment, and of each individual domain of EGFR to its dimerization kinetics in live cells, giving us valuable insight into the mechanisms underlying receptor dimerization.
Tuesday, September 14, 2021
Speaker: Dr. David Alejandro Garcia Grisales (NIH/NCI, U. Maryland). “The Role of Transcription Factor Dynamics in Gene Expression: Does Time Matter?”
Transcription factors (TFs) regulate gene expression by binding to specific consensus motifs within the local chromatin context. The mechanisms by which TFs navigate the nuclear environment as they search for binding sites remain unclear. Here, we used single-molecule tracking and machine-learning based classification to directly measure the nuclear mobility of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) in live cells. We revealed two distinct and dynamic low-mobility populations. One accounts for specific binding to chromatin, while the other represents a confinement state that requires an intrinsically disordered region (IDR), implicated in liquid-liquid condensate subdomains. Further analysis showed that the dwell times of both subpopulations follow a power-law distribution, consistent with a broad distribution of affinities on the GR cistrome and interactome. Altogether, our data link IDRs with a confinement state that is functionally distinct from specific chromatin binding and modulates the transcriptional output by increasing the local concentration of TFs at specific sites.
Tuesday, June 5, 2021
Speaker: Dr. Marina Feric (NIH/NCI). “The mitochondrial genome as a transcriptional condensate”
Mitochondria contain their own genome (mitochondrial DNA, mtDNA). mtDNA is not soluble in the mitochondrial matrix, but instead, is packaged by proteins to form membrane-less nucleoprotein structures called mitochondrial nucleoids. We have recently found that phase separation is the primary physical mechanism for assembly and size-control of mitochondrial nucleoids. The major mt-nucleoid architectural protein TFAM spontaneously phase separates on its own via weak, multivalent interactions into droplets with slow internal dynamics in vitro. Indeed, the mitochondrial transcriptional components, including mtDNA, the polymerase POLRMT, and transcription factor TFB2M, further partition with TFAM to form highly heterogenous, viscoelastic droplets in vitro, which recapitulate the dynamics and behavior of mt-nucleoids in vivo. Transcription can be targeted to these mitochondrial condensates in vitro, leading to significant structural changes associated with localized RNA production, yet with dampened kinetics compared to when all components are fully solubilized. The mitochondrial transcriptional machinery thus serves as a model system for studying the biophysics and kinetics of transcriptional condensates. Our results point to phase separation as an evolutionarily conserved mechanism of genome organization and function.
Tuesday, April 20, 2021
Speaker: Dr. Vu Nguyen (Johns Hopkins U). “Spatio-temporal coordination of transcription preinitiation complex assembly in live cells”
Transcription initiation by RNA polymerase II (Pol II) requires preinitiation complex (PIC) assembly at gene promoters. In the dynamic nucleus where thousands of promoters are broadly distributed in chromatin, it is unclear how ten individual components converge on any target to establish the PIC. Here, we use live-cell, single-molecule tracking in S. cerevisiae to document spatially constrained exploration of the nucleoplasm by PIC components, which is guided by the large coactivator complexes Mediator and TFIID. On chromatin, Mediator and TFIID/TBP instruct assembly of a short-lived PIC, which occurs infrequently but efficiently at an average promoter where initiation-coupled disassembly may occur within a few seconds. Moreover, PIC exclusion by nucleosome encroachment underscores regulated promoter accessibility by chromatin remodeling. Thus, coordinated nuclear exploration and recruitment to accessible targets underlies dynamic PIC establishment in yeast. Collectively, our study provides a global spatio-temporal model for transcription initiation in live cells.
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Speaker: Dr. Varun Sood (NIH/NCI). “Identification of chromatin determinants of gene bursting”
Stochastic bursting is a fundamental and an evolutionarily conserved feature of transcription, yet it is unclear how chromatin modulates the size and frequency of transcriptional bursts. Lack of high throughput models for testing the direct effects has limited a comprehensive understanding. We have performed comprehensive imaging-based screens of libraries of more than five hundred direct inhibitors of chromatin modifying enzymes for a set of twelve endogenous genes that have a wide range of bursting. We screened in two steps. First, we adapted nascent RNA FISH to estimate transcription site frequencies and used it as a parameter to assay acute changes in bursting in a high throughput imaging setup. Next, we validated hits by assaying changes in bursting kinetics using MS2 reporter cell lines. We discovered four broad categories of modulators of gene bursting: Inhibitors of histone deacetylase (HDAC-i), bromodomain containing proteins, demethylases and Janus kinases. Amongst these, HDAC-i showed the strongest impact on bursting that resulted from a 10-30% decrease in the mean Off-time. This decrease was restricted to the longer Off-times while the shorter Off-times were unaffected. On the other hand, changes in On-time were gene specific. HDAC-i also decreased the burst size for several genes across three cell lines and drastically increased the heterogeneity of burst sizes for MYC, EGFR and P53 in MCF7 cells. At the chromatin level, the HDAC-i primarily increased the gene body acetylation of histone 3 lysine 27. However, these changes were quantitatively different between genes with increased vs decreased bursting. Our results suggest that chromatin can regulate both size and frequency of bursting. Modulation of bursting occurs by changing the fraction of long Off-times. Finally, the gene specific regulation of bursting is influenced by both chromatin context and signaling.
Tuesday, February 16, 2021
Speaker: Dr. James McNally (Helmholtz Center, Berlin). “Cryo soft X-ray tomography: a tool for unbiased detection of ultrastructural changes in perturbed cells”.
Soft X-ray tomography enables 3D nanoscale imaging of intact, unstained biological cells in their near native state, subject only to cryo-preservation. This talk will discuss the underlying principles of the technique, and also illustrate some of its applications. Soft X-ray tomography can visualize most cytoplasmic organelles at resolutions approaching 30 nm without staining or chemical fixation. Cells are instead cryo-preserved, and cellular structure is detected based on the natural contrast of organic matter in this soft X-ray energy range. Furthermore, correlative fluorescence and X-ray microscopy can also be performed on the same sample under cryo conditions. These capabilities are ideally suited for initial, unbiased detection of changes in cell ultrastructure induced by any sort of perturbation: unbiased because no a priori knowledge is required about which cellular components should be stained (in contrast to fluorescence microscopy), and because the entire 3D cell volume is visible and so rare or localized changes are easily found (in contrast to electron microscopy). We illustrate how these capabilities have enabled the detection of structural changes induced by nanoparticle uptake into cells, which we found induces a cytoplasmic reorganization that had not been seen before by traditional microscopy analyses. These changes in cytoplasmic organelle content after nanoparticle uptake may reflect a more common cellular response to nanoparticles, which are now widely used in commercial products, as well as in medicine, including the mRNA-based Covid 19 vaccines.
Kepsutlu, B., Wycisk, V., Achazi, K., Kapishnikov, S., Pérez-Berná, A.J., Guttmann, P., Cossmer, A., Pereiro, E., Ewers, H., Ballauff, M., Schneider, G. and McNally, J.G. (2021) Cells undergo major changes in the quantity of cytoplasmic organelles after uptake of gold nanoparticles with biologically relevant surface coatings. ACS Nano 14:2248-2264.
Müller, W.G., Heymann J.B., Nagashima, K., Guttmann, P., Werner, S., Rehbein, S., Schneider, G., McNally, J.G. (2011) Towards an atlas of mammalian cell ulstrastructure by cryo soft X-ray tomography. J. Struct. Biol. 177:179-192.
Schneider, G., Guttmann, P., Heim, S., Rehbein, S., Mueller, F., Nagashima, K., Heymann, J.B., Müller, W.G., McNally, J.G. (2010) Three-dimensional cellular ultrastructure resolved by X-ray microscopy. Nat. Meth. 7:985-987.
Tuesday, January 19, 2021
Dr. James Zhe Liu (HHMI, Janelia). “Organizing mechanism of the accessible genome”
To image active chromatin at nanometer scale in situ, we developed 3D ATAC-PALM that integrates the assay for transposase-accessible chromatin (ATAC), PALM super-resolution imaging and lattice light-sheet microscopy. Multiplexed with oligopaint DNA–FISH, RNA–FISH and protein fluorescence, 3D ATAC-PALM connected microscopy and genomic data, revealing spatially segregated accessible chromatin domains (ACDs) that enclose active chromatin and transcribed genes. Using these methods to analyze genetically perturbed cells, we identify the BET family scaffold protein BRD2 as a key factor responsible for compartmentalization of the accessible genome. Specifically, BRD2 mixes and compacts active compartments in the absence of Cohesin. This activity is independent of transcription but requires BRD2 to recognize acetylated nucleosomes through its double bromodomain. We also show that BRD2 safeguards compartmental boundaries by preventing intermingling between active and inactive chromatin. Notably, genome organization mediated by BRD2 is antagonized on one hand by Cohesin and on the other by the BET homolog protein BRD4, both of which inhibit BRD2 binding to chromatin. Polymer simulation of the data supports a BRD2-Cohesin ‘tug-of-war’ model of nuclear topology, where genome compartmentalization results from a competition between loop extrusion and chromatin state-specific affinity interactions.
Seminars in 2020
Tuesday, November 10, 2019
Dr. Eloise Grasset (Johns Hopkins U Med School). “3D imaging of the breast cancer metastasis; lessons from culture and tissues”
Metastasis is a complex process challenging to study in vivo since they occur deep inside the body over extended periods of time. To understand how cancer cells metastasize, we developed 3D imaging assays that recapitulate different steps of the metastatic cascade such as invasion and metastatic outgrowth1. Using these assays, we demonstrated that luminal breast cancer models typically retain an epithelial differentiation state, while triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) models display a hybrid E/M state that lead invasion ex vivo. We validated these results in vivo by analyzing whole tumor sections from mouse models, patient-derived xenografts and tumor microarray using an automated slide scanner microscope. We showed using single-cell RNA sequencing and immunofluorescence that basal breast cancer cells undergo EMT during invasion and MET during metastatic outgrowth ex vivo. We then demonstrated that the mesenchymal marker vimentin, which is acquired during EMT, suppressed invasion in multiple TNBC models, and metastasis formation in vivo, indicating that EMT is required for metastasis. Consistent with a MET in the distant organs, we showed that knocking down vimentin at the metastatic site, increased metastasis in vivo. However, a time-course analysis of the metastatic seeding and outgrowth using immunofluorescence revealed that cancer cells use EMT to disseminate at the metastatic site demonstrating that MET is advantageous but not required.
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
Dr. Ahmed Abdelfattah (Janelia/HHMI). “Genetically encoded voltage sensors for optical monitoring of the brain activity”
Voltage imaging provides unparalleled spatial and temporal resolution of the brain’s electrical signaling at the cellular and circuit levels. A longstanding challenge has been to develop genetically encoded voltage sensors to track membrane voltage from multiple neurons in behaving animals. However, brightness and signal to noise ratio have limited the utility of existing voltage sensors, especially in vivo. I will describe our work to engineer hybrid protein-small molecule sensors with improved brightness and photostability that allow imaging neural circuits in vivo. Using those sensors, we extend both productive imaging time and number of neurons imaged by more than 10 times in awake behaving animals.
Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Malgorzata Latallo (Johns Hopkins Sch. Med).
“Nuclear export and translation of circular repeat-containing intronic RNA in C9ORF72-ALS/FTD”
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) currently is an incurable disease caused by motor neuron degeneration. The most common cause of inheritable ALS is the expansion of hexanucleotide GGGGCC repeat in the first intron of C9ORF72 gene. RNA containing abnormally long GGGGCC repeats can form RNA foci, which may sequester essential RNA binding proteins. Alternatively, repetitive RNA can be exported from nucleus and translated via repeat associated non-ATG (RAN) translation to generate different poly dipeptide repeats (DPR). We now used single molecule imaging approach to examine the molecular identity and spatiotemporal dynamics of the repeat containing C9ORF72 RNAs. We demonstrated that the spliced intron was stabilized by the expanded repeats in a circular form due to defective debranching. The circular intronic RNA is exported to cytoplasm through the NXF1-NXT1 pathway and serves as the template for the unconventional RAN translation, which is elevated by stress. This study reveals an uncharacterized disease-causing RNA species and demonstrates the importance of gene context of repeat expansion and RNA spatial localization to understand disease etiology.
Seminars in 2019
Tuesday, December 10, 2019
Dr. Daniel Melters (NCI/NIH). “High-speed Atomic Force Microscopy reveals dynamic nature of chromatin fibers”
How do individual molecules behave? This question has is at the basis of the molecular biology. A wide range of techniques have been developed over the last several decades, but direct observation of the biophysical motions and actions of molecules remains elusive. Atomic force microscopy has allowed us to visualize individual molecules, but only as static images. With the recent development of high-speed atomic force microscopy, the dynamic behavior of individual molecules can now be visualized and quantified at near video-rate resolution. We can now see nucleosomes slide along DNA, for instance.
Tuesday, November 12, 2019
Dr. David Garcia Grisales (NCI/NIH; U. Maryland). “New Emergent Properties of Transcription Factor Dynamics and Their Interactions with Chromatin”
Single-molecule tracking allows the study of transcription factor dynamics in the nucleus, giving important information regarding the search and binding behavior of these proteins with chromatin in vivo. However, these experiments suffer from limitations due to photobleaching of the traced protein and pre-assumptions on exponential behavior required for data interpretation, potentially leading to serious artifacts. Here, we developed an improved method to account for photobleaching effects, theory-based models to accurately describe transcription factor dynamics, and an unbiased model selection approach to determine the best predicting model. A new biological interpretation of transcriptional regulation emerges from the proposed models wherein transcription factor searching and binding on the DNA and nuclear microenvironment heterogeneity result in a broad distribution of binding affinities and accounts for the power-law behavior of transcription factor residence times. Moreover, two types of confinement are discovered: one related with specific DNA interaction and a second one related to liquid-liquid phase separation. The latter shows the importance of phase separation in transcriptional regulation and gene expression.
Tuesday, October 15, 2019
Dr. Colenso Speer (U. Maryland). “Reconstructing neural circuits with volumetric super-resolution microscopy”
Light microscopy enables multi-color imaging, analysis, and live tracking of diverse cellular and molecular processes and is a vital tool for studying neural circuits. In the last decade, super-resolution microscopy techniques have extended the spatial resolution of optical imaging to the nanoscale and enabled new investigations of the molecular organization and structural properties of synapses in the nervous system. In this seminar, I will discuss approaches for applying STochastic Optical Reconstruction Microscopy (STORM) and Expansion Microscopy (Exm) to the analysis of synaptic structure and connectivity over volumetric areas of brain tissue. I will present a basic guide for researchers interested in applying super-resolution imaging in their own investigations and will cover both the strengths and limitations of the approaches. Considerations for optimizing sample preparation, super-resolution image quality, and automated data analysis will be discussed. Data demonstrating the imaging and analysis of synaptic inputs to identified neurons as well as approaches for synaptic protein labeling and cell type-specific labeling for super-resolution reconstruction will be presented. Volumetric super-resolution microscopy provides an important new class of structural and molecular imaging data that is complementary to connectomic reconstruction of neural circuits by electron microscopy
Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Dr. Brant Weinstein (NIH/NICHD) “Studying novel vascular-associated cell populations in the zebrafish using advanced imaging”.
N/A
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
Dr. Megan Rizzo (U. Maryland). “Polarization light sheet microscopy for homotransfer biosensor imaging”.
Homotransfer FLARE-type biosensors offer numerous advantages over classic heterotransfer FRET sensors, including polarized light readout and enhanced multiplexing capabilities. Even so, accurate FRET measurements require high signal-to-noise image capture conditions that limit data collection speeds and introduce phototoxicity concerns. These limitations can be overcome by constructing a polarization-capable inverted selective plane illumination microscope. The piSPIM technology enables video rate collection speeds of homotransfer reporters and long-term imaging over several hours without demonstrable phototoxicity.
Tuesday, May 21, 2019
Dr. Kem Sochacki (NIH/NHLBI). “Correlative fluorescence localization microscopy and platinum replica electron microscopy highlights the edge of clathrin mediated endocytosis”.
Clathrin mediated endocytosis (CME) is a major mode of internalization for eukaryotic cells. During this process, clathrin proteins form patches of honeycomb-shaped scaffolds that coat the internalizing membrane. Several dozens of membrane adapters and accessory proteins are intrinsic to the proper development of a clathrin-coated pit. Platinum replica electron microscopy allows high resolution (~2 nm) high contrast visualization of clathrin structures at the plasma membrane and has been a corner-stone imaging technique in the study of CME. Combining this classic technique with the more recently developed super-resolution fluorescence localization microscopy, we have mapped the positions of 19 key clathrin associated proteins with respect their ultrastructural topography at single coated pits. We find that obtaining the protein location and cellular ultrastructure with different imaging modes has many benefits. These include 1) an unhindered view of the ultrastructure surrounding proteins of interest and 2) straightforward computational analysis and statistics of protein distributions. Through this work we discovered that the edge of clathrin structures concentrates a hub of adaptors and accessory proteins which are integral to the fate of clathrin-mediated endocytosis.
Tuesday, April 23, 2019
Andrew Lauziere (U.Maryland/NIBIB) “Deep learning in imaging”
Deep learning describes a model paradigm that has quickly emerged as a leader across many fields. Microscopists in particular have found many cutting edge uses with the technology. A brief introduction to deep learning precedes basic models, and some applications. Specifically, the U-Net architecture produces state of the art segmentations in microscopy images all the while the same type of model can produce super resolution images. The Section on High Resolution Optical Imaging (HROI) is taking full advantage of this methodology to enhance and forward current projects.
Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Dr. Diana Stavreva (NCI/NIH) “Single cell transcription analysis in live cells”
Transcription factors (TFs) interact dynamically with genomic targets and genes are transcribed in a discontinuous pattern referred to as RNA bursting. However, it is unclear how TFs regulate bursting. To address this, we utilized several state-of-the-art approaches: 1) Custom imaging and analysis platform, which was developed by the High-throughput Imaging Facility at the NCI and used to characterize the real time synthesis of fluorescently labeled RNA from GR-regulated MMTV TSs in a high-throughput format. These experiments revealed that the RNA bursting pattern changes over time and is also ligand-specific. 2) Single-molecule tracking (SMT) method, which allowed us to characterize the changes in the intranuclear mobility of GR in living cells and to compare them to the MMTV-RNA bursting pattern under various treatment conditions. In these experiments we utilized a novel single-molecule tracking data analysis method developed in the lab. 3) 3D orbital tracking method (3DOT), which allows following the transcription sites (TSs) over time in 3D and simultaneous detection of the intensity of the GR binding and the RNA production at the transcribing locus. These experiments revealed a substantial delay between GR binding and RNA synthesis. We concluded that receptor dwell time at genome targets determines burst duration, while the fraction of transiently bound receptor molecules determines burst frequency. Using 3D tracking of TSs, we have directly correlated transcription factor binding and transcription initiation at the single promoter level in a mammalian system. Together, our data reveal a dynamic interplay between TF mobility and RNA bursting that is responsive to stimuli strength, type, modality, and duration.
Tuesday, January 15, 2019
Dr. Paul Tillberg (HHMI, Janelia) ” Expansion microscopy: scalable super-resolution imaging through uniform specimen expansion “
The Expansion Microscopy method allows effectively sub-diffraction limited optical imaging of biological specimens, without a super-resolution microscope. This is done by expanding the specimen uniformly in three dimensions. Expansion is achieved by embedding the tissue in an ultra-swellable gel, chemically linking biomolecules directly to the gel, digesting the tissue down to molecular-scale pieces, and using the swelling behavior of the gel material to pull the molecular fragments away from each other uniformly. This can be done on relatively thick tissue slices, up to at least 200 um thick. The method is easy to adopt and well-suited as a histology core facility offering, as it is compatible with existing antibody and fluorescent protein labeling protocols without modification. The gel material can be engineered to extend the original fourfold expansion (in each dimension) to seven-fold or more, while maintaining a simple, robust workflow.
Seminars in 2018
Tuesday, December 11, 2018
Dr. Quinggong Tang (U. Oklahoma) “Depth-resolved molecular characterization of tissues in 3D by Fluorescent Laminar Optical Tomography and its applications for cancer diagnostics”
Laminar optical tomography (LOT) is a mesoscopic three-dimensional (3D) optical imaging technique that can achieve both a resolution of 100-200 µm and a penetration depth of 2-3 mm based either on absorption or fluorescence contrast. Fluorescence laminar optical tomography (FLOT) can also provide large field-of-view (FOV) and high acquisition speed. All of these advantages make FLOT suitable for 3D depth-resolved imaging in tissue engineering, neuroscience, and oncology. In this study, by incorporating the high-dynamic-range (HDR) method widely used in digital cameras, we presented the HDR-FLOT. HDR-FLOT can moderate the limited dynamic range of the charge-coupled device-based system in FLOT and thus increase penetration depth and improve the ability to image fluorescent samples with a large concentration difference. For functional mapping of brain activities, we applied FLOT to record 3D neural activities evoked in the whisker system of mice by deflection of a single whisker in vivo. We utilized FLOT to investigate the cell viability, migration, and bone mineralization within bone tissue engineering scaffolds in situ, which allows depth-resolved molecular characterization of engineered tissues in 3D. Moreover, we investigated the feasibility of the multi-modal optical imaging approach including high-resolution optical coherence tomography (OCT) and high-sensitivity FLOT for structural and molecular imaging of colon tumors, which has demonstrated more accurate diagnosis with 88.23% (82.35%) for sensitivity (specificity) compared to either modality alone. We further applied the multi-modal imaging system to monitor the drug distribution and therapeutic effects during and after Photo-immunotherapy (PIT) in situ and in vivo, which is a novel low-side-effect targeted cancer therapy.
Tuesday, November 13, 2018
Dr. Amicia Elliott (NIH/NIMH) “Using light-sheet microscopy to study evoked motor sequence generation in Drosophila”
Motor sequences are important elements of everyday behavior, but how they are produced by central neural circuits is poorly understood. Fruit fly neural circuits drive complex motor sequences and are small enough to investigate at a brain-wide scale via emerging methods in microscopy. We use a critical behavioral sequence for the fruitfly, called ecdysis, to study the neural control of behavior. Ecdysis is required for molting at each developmental stage and consists of three serially executed, stereotyped behavioral programs at the pupal stage. The controlling neural circuit includes approximately 300 peptidergic neurons that express the Ecdysis Triggering Hormone receptor (ETHR) and are activated by peripheral release of Ecdysis Triggering Hormone (ETH) that leads to the behavioral sequence. Existing data indicate that specific subpopulations are required for each behavioral phase of ecdysis (1). However, the identities of the individual neurons that control each behavioral phase remain largely unknown, as do the mechanisms by which they regulate motor output. To achieve a detailed cellular-level understanding of the ecdysis circuit, we have built a light-sheet microscope that is capable of imaging the Drosophila pupal CNS rapidly at high resolution (2). We are currently using Ca2+ biosensors to monitor the neural activity in populations of motor neurons in excised brains in response to ETH.
Tuesday, October 16, 2018
Dr. Kyung Lee (NIH/NCI) “Structure and Function of Mammalian Centrosomal Assemblies”
As the main microtubule-organizing center for animal cells, centrosomes are critically required for various cellular processes, including bipolar spindle formation and mitotic chromosome segregation. They are composed of two orthogonally arranged centrioles, which duplicate early in the cell cycle in a manner that takes place only once per each cycle. Accurate control of centriole numbers is essential for normal chromosome segregation and maintenance of genomic integrity. A growing body of evidence suggests that mammalian polo-like kinase 4 (Plk4) plays a key role in inducing centriole duplication. Plk4 localizes to distinct subcentrosomal sites by interacting with a centrosomal scaffold protein, Cep152. Interestingly, Cep152 tightly binds to another scaffold protein, Cep63, and this step appears to be critical to assemble a higher-order cylindrical architecture around a centriole. Notably, mutations in the Cep152 and Cep63 scaffolds are frequently linked to various human diseases, such as cancer, microcephaly, ciliopathy, and dwarfism. Therefore, investigating the molecular basis of how these scaffolds are assembled into a higher-order structure and how the assembled architecture promotes Plk4-dependent centriole duplication will be important not only to understand one of the most fundamental cellular processes of centrosomal organization but also to discover the causes of human genetic disorders associated with centrosome abnormalities. Our latest findings on the molecular nature and biological significance of the Cep152•Cep63 complex-generated cylindrical self-assembly will be discussed.
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Dr. Mihaela Serpe (NIH/NICHD) “Molecular mechanisms of synapse assembly and homeostasis – lessons from genetics and imaging in flies”
The purpose of our research is to understand the mechanisms of synapse development and homeostasis. Using the Drosophila neuromuscular junction (NMJ) as a model for glutamatergic synapse, we focus on three key processes in synaptogenesis: (1) trafficking of components to the proper site, (2) organizing those components to build synaptic structures, and (3) maturation and homeostasis of the synapse to optimize its activity. We address the mechanisms underlying these processes using a comprehensive set of approaches including genetics, biochemistry, molecular biology, super resolution imaging and electrophysiology recordings in live animals and reconstituted systems. I will emphasize how microscopy techniques have enabled our recent accomplishments:
(1) identification of a key auxiliary protein of glutamatergic synapses, called Neto, that is essential for their development and function both in Drosophila and mammals, and the molecular dissection of its activities, and
(2) analysis of the action of the TGF-β pathway in synaptic plasticity, and in particular the discovery of a novel mechanism by which local, non-transcriptional BMP signaling directly modulates synapse structure and activity.
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
Dr. Philip Anfinrud (NIH/NIDDK) “Watching proteins function in real time via picosecond X-ray diffraction”
To understand how a protein functions, it is crucial to know the time-ordered sequence of structural changes associated with its function. To that end, we have developed numerous experimental techniques for characterizing structural changes in proteins over time scales ranging from femtoseconds to seconds. This talk will focus primarily on time-resolved X-ray studies performed on the BioCARS beamline at the Advanced Photon Source, which allowed us to characterize structural changes in proteins with 150-ps time resolution. We have used this capability to track the reversible photocycle of photoactive yellow protein following trans-to-cis photoisomerization of its p-coumaric acid (pCA) chromophore. Briefly, a picosecond laser pulse photoexcites pCA and triggers a structural change in the protein, which is probed with a suitably delayed picosecond X-ray pulse. When the protein is studied in a crystalline state, this “pump-probe” approach recovers time-resolved diffraction “snapshots” whose corresponding electron density maps can be stitched together into a real-time movie of the structural changes that ensue. However, the actual signaling state is not accessible in the crystalline state due to crystal packing constraints. This state is accessible in time-resolved small- and wide-angle X-ray scattering studies, which probe changes in the size, shape, and structure of the protein. These studies help provide a framework for understanding protein function, and for assessing and validating theoretical/computational approaches in protein biophysics. This research was supported in part by the Intramural Research Program of the NIH, NIDDK.
Tuesday, April 17, 2018
Dr. Simona Patange (NIH/NCI) “A living, single view of MYC’s effects on transcription”
How does a transcription factor transmit information to a gene in a single cell context? To answer this question we examine the oncogenic transcription factor c-MYC. MYC is upregulated in most human cancers, yielding a global increase in gene expression. However the mechanism by which MYC amplifies transcription, and why it promotes cancer, has remained notoriously elusive. To address this gap in understanding we seek a quantitative, single-cell view of how MYC modulates the kinetics of transcription. We use two recently-developed imaging techniques: 1) single-molecule FISH to quantify RNA in fixed cells, and 2) live cell imaging of transcription with the MS2-PP7 stem loop system to observe real-time RNA production at a given gene locus. We predict that if MYC amplifies gene expression, then we would observe either an increase in the frequency of transcription events, or the duration of transcription events, or a combination of the two. Our results looking at the effect of MYC perturbations on both an exogenous reporter and endogenous gene show that MYC increases the duration of transcription events— this results in greater gene expression, but also an increase in its heterogeneity. These findings provide living, single cell evidence of MYC as a global amplifier of gene expression and suggests that the mechanism is by stabilizing the active period of a gene. We speculate that the added consequence of MYC’s propensity to increase gene expression heterogeneity could drive cells to transiently populate pathological states and phenotypes that may ultimately make them susceptible to cancer.
Tuesday, March 20, 2018
Dr. Jie Xiao (Johns Hopkins U Sch Med) “Quantitative superresolution imaging for bacterial cell biology”
Single-molecule localization based superresolution microscopy (SMLM) not only can reveal fine dimensional details of cellular structures beyond the diffraction limit, but also can provide lists of molecular coordinates to enable the critical ability of quantifying the number, clustering, complexity, colocalization and organization of biomolecules with 10-50 nm resolution. When coupled with genetic and biochemical investigations, these methods are powerful in accessing new information not possible before. In this talk I will discuss a few case studies in which SMLM allows us to understand the assembly, organization, function and dynamics of a variety of bacterial cellular structures.
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
Dr. Matthew Wooten (Johns Hopkins U Sch Med), “Super Resolution as a tool to study a potential role for DNA replication in establishing distinct epigenomes”
The primary function of DNA replication is to duplicate the genome. However, the process of DNA replication must also duplicate epigenetic information. Epigenetic mechanisms play a key role in altering chromatin structure and gene expression patterns, and in specifying and maintaining stem cell identity throughout cell division. Many types of stem cells have the ability to asymmetrically divide to give rise to one daughter cell capable of self-renewal and another daughter capable of differentiating.
Using a dual-color labeling system, we demonstrated that in the Drosophila germline H3 is inherited asymmetrically whereas the H3 variant H3.3 is inherited symmetrically. As H3 is incorporated during S-phase whereas H3.3 is incorporated in a replication-independent manner we hypothesize that old and new H3 are differentially incorporated into distinct sister chromatids during DNA replication.
Because the average diameter of replication forks in eukaryotic cells (~150 – 400 nm) is at or below the diffraction-limited resolution of conventional fluorescence light microscopy (250 – 300 nm), we used single molecule localization based super-resolution (SR) imaging to examine the spatial distribution of old and new H3 and H3.3 in interphase GSCs. Interestingly, we were able to observe that these two histone species show significantly different co-localization patterns throughout interphase.
We have developed a method using STED SR microscopy in tandem with the chromatin fiber technique to observe asymmetries in DNA replication as well as unique patterns in the distribution of H3 versus H3.3 in newly replicated sister chromatids. H3-labeled chromatin fibers show a significantly higher degree of asymmetry than do H3.3 chromatin fibers, which may be a basis for the distinct patterns of H3 and H3.3 inheritance at the genome-wide level. In addition, during replication-coupled nucleosome assembly, old histones preferentially associate with the leading strand whereas new histones preferentially associate with the lagging strand. Based on these data, we propose that the asymmetries inherent to the process of DNA replication serve to bias histone inheritance such that the leading strand preferentially inherits old histone and the lagging strand preferentially inherits new histones.
Seminars in 2017
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
Dr. Ulrike Boehm (NIH/NCI) “4Pi‐RESOLFT nanoscopy: Nanometer scale 3D fluorescence imaging in whole living cells”
Deep learning describes a model paradigm that has quickly emerged as a leader across many fields. Microscopists in particular have found many cutting edge uses with the technology. A brief introduction to deep learning precedes basic models, and some applications. Specifically, the U-Net architecture produces state of the art segmentations in microscopy images all the while the same type of model can produce super resolution images. The Section on High Resolution Optical Imaging (HROI) is taking full advantage of this methodology to enhance and forward current projects.
Tuesday, November 14, 2017
Dr. Kandice Tanner (NIH/NCI) “Probing the physical properties of the microenvironment in vivo”
Tissue is composed of heterogeneous biological components that modulate physical properties within the microenvironment. Transformation of the physico-chemical properties of the stromal microenvironment such as changes in the extracellular matrix (ECM) has been shown to be associated with cancer progression. Cells respond to both chemical and physical cues of the microenvironment. In tissue, chemical and mechanical cues are both modulated by changes in ligand density and localized tissue architecture. Hence, decoupling chemical cues from those due to the physical changes is non-trivial. What is needed is the ability to resolve and quantitate minute forces that cells sense in the local environment (on the order of microns) within thick tissue (in mm). To achieve this, we employ a method to quantitate absolute tissue mechanics using in vitro and in vivo models. We performed Active Microrheology by optical trapping in vivo, using in situ calibration to accurately apply and measure forces. With micrometer resolution at broadband frequencies and depths approaching 0.5 mm, we probed differential stresses and strains on force, time and length scales relevant to cellular processes in living zebrafish. We determined that proxy calibration methods overestimate complex moduli by as much as ~20 fold. While ECM hydrogels displayed rheological properties predicted for polymer networks, new models may be needed to describe the behavior of tissues observed. Finally, we validated our in vitro findings in an in vivo model using zebrafish as our model for metastasis. We believe that this platform can be used in elucidating the basic mechanisms that govern the role of material properties in mechanobiology.
Tuesday, October 17, 2017
Dr. Petr Kalab (Johns Hopkins U) “Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) for quantitative live-cell measurements with Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET) probes”
Most of the commonly used fluorescence microscopy techniques today depend on the detection of the emission intensity of various fluorescent proteins, dyes or endogenous reports. In addition to the crucially useful separation of the emission and excitation wavelengths, the fluorescence process offers another exciting and so far underused opportunity to explore living cells through the fluorescence lifetimes of fluorophores. The fluorescence lifetime, which is independent of the emission intensity, is a measure of the time it takes before the excited fluorophore returns to its ground state. The interesting feature of fluorescence is that the energy dissipation from the excited state depends on the molecular condition of the fluorophores (protonation, oxygenation, etc.) and their environment (such as binding to fluorescent or non-fluorescent molecules). Because of that, the fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) has the potential to provide real-time measurements of molecular interactions and biochemical reactions in live cells. The time-correlated single photon counting (TCSPC) method of FLIM provides better lifetime resolution and higher photon usage efficiency than its main alternative, the fluorescence polarization FLIM. We used the TCSPC FLIM with monomolecular FRET reporters to study the role of the small GTPase Ran in the regulation of mitosis, cell cycle or DNA repair. In those studies, the quantitative properties of the FLIM/FRET imaging gave us the particularly useful insights. FLIM provides a rigorous and quantitative method of FRET measurements and has several distinct advantages over the intensity-based methods, including relaxed concerns for spectral crosstalks (only donor emission is detected), insensitivity to sensor concentration (within reasonable limits) and the straightforward relationship between the measured lifetimes and FRET efficiency. The main limitations in FLIM/FRET, which should not be underestimated, is the need for a large number of photons (about 1000/bin) to resolve 2-3 exponential lifetimes that are typical for all fluorophores in the cellular environment. While the technology is constantly evolving, the application of FLIM/FRET requires careful consideration of the necessary temporal or spatial resolution. In this presentation, I will provide a brief overview of the main theoretical and namely practical aspects of FRET detection with FLIM. These topics will include the design of FRET sensors for FLIM, the important features of excitation sources and detectors, and the available FLIM computation methods, including the global analysis via the Phasor approach. Finally, since some of the data that I will discuss we acquired with the still fully functional equipment in the NCI imaging core, the talk could serve as an introduction to the users of the facility who are interested in applying FLIM in their research.
Tuesday, September 19, 2017
Dr. Steven S Vogel (NIH/NIAAA) “Ultra-Fast Long-Distance Energy Transfer Between Fluorescent Proteins”
An implicit and often unmentioned assumption of studies utilizing genetically encoded Green Fluorescent Protein, its derivatives, and structurally related fluorescent proteins (FPs), is that they behave like classical organic fluorophores. When conventional fluorophores are in close-proximity (< 1 nm) and/or are cooled to temperatures approaching absolute zero, coherent energy transfer (CET) may enable multiple fluorophores to behave as a single quantum entity. CET is thought to play a key role in photosynthesis, and vis-à-vis technology, may enable quantum computing. CET can manifest as ultra-fast long-distance energy transfer within fluorophore assemblies. Antibunching and Davydov splitting of circular dichroism (CD) spectra, uniquely quantum mechanical behaviors, are indicative of CET. Physiological temperatures extinguish CET by promoting rapid collisional dephasing of fluorophore vibrational modes (typically within 100 fs of photoexcitation). Moreover, because FP fluorophores are encased in a ß-barrel structure, proximities closer than 2 nm are not possible. Thus, CET between FPs at physiological temperatures is thought to be impossible. Nonetheless, time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, antibunching, and CD all indicate stronger than expected coupling between FPs. Paired-pulse correlation spectroscopy revealed that dephasing between coupled FPs occurs between 400-600 fs after photoexcitation, suggesting that the FP ß-barrel attenuates dephasing to allow CET.
Tuesday, June 20, 2017
Dr. Ronald N. Germain (NIH/NIAID) “Imaging Immunity – Developing a Spatiotemporal Understanding of Host Defense Using Intravital Dynamic and Multiplex Static Microscopy”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar of Dr. Ronald Germain (NIH/NIAID) about two-photon dynamic intravital and static 3D tissue imaging. For the latter Dr. Germain perfected clarification techniques and developed software that allows quantitative multichannel analysis of cellular distribution in 3D in whole organs. In combination, these two techniques lead to deep understanding of how the tissues are organized, and how this organization is dynamically maintained and adapted to microenvironment. Stunning work, stunning resource!
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
Dr. Vinay Swaminathan (NIH/NHLBI) “Co-alignment and orientation of activated integrins in focal adhesions of migrating cells studied by fluorescence polarization”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar of Dr. Vinay Swaminathan (NIH/NHLBI) about dynamic integrin response to physical and chemical information. Techniques of fluorescence polarization microscopy led to amazing discovery: integrins come to attention (co-align) obeying the trumpet of directional mechanical force. Come to this seminar to learn whether measurements of molecular anisotropy are applicable to your favorite biological system.
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
Dr. Ville Paakinaho (NIH/NCI) “Single-Molecule Imaging and the future of simultaneous tracking of Multiple Transcription Factors”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar of Dr. Ville Paakinaho (NIH/NCI) about real-time dynamics of Transcription Factor action studied by the state-of-the-art Single Molecule Tracking. In these pioneer studies Glucocorticoid Receptor (GR) and other TF were tagged with HaloTag and SNAP-tag and observed on custom-built microscope with a special illumination technique (HILO). Don’t miss this presentation about the exciting new technique! Isn’t it surprising how dynamic the life of the cellular molecules is?
Tuesday, March 21, 2017
Dr. Lakshmi Balagopalan (NIH/NCI) “Oh The Places LAT Goes!”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar of Dr. Lakshmi Balagopalan (NIH/NCI) about the mechanism of microcluster formation in activated T-cells. This is an excellent example of the application of cutting-edge high-resolution microscopy for kinetics of T-cell vesicle formation (Lattice LSM and TIRF-SIM). Where Biochemistry makes educated guesses, Microscopy observes!
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
Dr. Elisabeth Finn (NIH/NCI) “Examining genome-wide patterns of DNA:DNA interaction via high throughput imaging”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar of Dr. Elisabeth FInn (NIH/NCI) about genome organization and its cell-to-cell variation revealed by high-throughput FISH.
Seminars in 2016
Tuesday, November 22, 2016
Dr. Martin Schnermann (NIH/NCI) “Near IR uncaging chemistry: discovery and applications”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar about a new antibody-based drug-delivery method, based on “uncaging” of biologically active molecules by near-IR light. The use of tissue penetrant near-IR wavelengths enables in vivo applications. Dr. Schnermann (NCI) applied chemical remodeling to cyanines and developed novel cyanine fluorophores with improved properties for drug uncaging, in vivo optical imaging, and super resolution microscopy. Amazing resource!
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Dr. Luke Lavis (HHMI, Janelia Farms) “Building brighter dyes for single-molecule imaging”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar about fantastic advancements in the field of labeling live proteins in situ. Reseach of Dr. Lavis opened a new era in live imaging by permitting bright, stable and reliable labeling of protein fusions to Halo Tag, SNAP tag and CLIP tag. Single-molecule imaging is made possible by this technological achievement. Ladies and Gentlemen, PhD and MD, please greet our future Nobel laureate!
Tuesday, September 20, 2016
Dr. Jason Yi (NIH/NCI) “madSTORM: a super resolution technique for large-scale multiplexing at single molecule accuracy”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar about madly successful superresolution strategy developed in CCR. madSTORM allows accurate targeting of multiple molecules using sequential binding and elution of fluorescent antibodies. madSTORM was applied to an activated T cell to localize 25 epitopes, 14 of which are on components of the same multi-molecular T cell receptor complex. Please, come! Especially if you fancy a big multisubunit complex of your own!
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Dr. Diego Presman (NCI/NIH) “Analysis of Glucocorticoid Receptor Dynamics by Number and Brightness and Single-Molecule Tracking methods”
Can you imagine such a treat! A hunt for single molecules! Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar about dynamic binding behavior and oligomerization of glucocorticoid receptors. Single molecule tracking will tell you important things about biophysical characteristics of transcriptional factors. And we want NUMBERS! Prepare yourself for a wild ride on the waves of state-of the art techniques!
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Dr. Kenneth Jacobson (NIH/NIDDK) “Fluorescent Ligands of GPCRs: Adenosine and P2Y Receptors”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar about fluorescent probes for adenosine receptors – important proteins involved in inflammation.
Seminars in 2021
Tuesday, January 19, 2021
Dr. James Zhe Liu (HHMI, Janelia). “Organizing mechanism of the accessible genome”
To image active chromatin at nanometer scale in situ, we developed 3D ATAC-PALM that integrates the assay for transposase-accessible chromatin (ATAC), PALM super-resolution imaging and lattice light-sheet microscopy. Multiplexed with oligopaint DNA–FISH, RNA–FISH and protein fluorescence, 3D ATAC-PALM connected microscopy and genomic data, revealing spatially segregated accessible chromatin domains (ACDs) that enclose active chromatin and transcribed genes. Using these methods to analyze genetically perturbed cells, we identify the BET family scaffold protein BRD2 as a key factor responsible for compartmentalization of the accessible genome. Specifically, BRD2 mixes and compacts active compartments in the absence of Cohesin. This activity is independent of transcription but requires BRD2 to recognize acetylated nucleosomes through its double bromodomain. We also show that BRD2 safeguards compartmental boundaries by preventing intermingling between active and inactive chromatin. Notably, genome organization mediated by BRD2 is antagonized on one hand by Cohesin and on the other by the BET homolog protein BRD4, both of which inhibit BRD2 binding to chromatin. Polymer simulation of the data supports a BRD2-Cohesin ‘tug-of-war’ model of nuclear topology, where genome compartmentalization results from a competition between loop extrusion and chromatin state-specific affinity interactions.
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
Dr. Jadranka Loncarek (NIH/NCI) “Centriole engagement: a matter of maturity?”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar about super resolution, light and electron microscopy in studies of centrosome anomalies and centrosome cycle.
Seminars in 2015
Tuesday, December 15, 2015
Dr. Jan Wisniewski (Janelia Farms) “Instant 3D imaging with Multi-Focus Microscope”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar about tracking of molecules in 4D made possible by innovative technique allowing simultaneous acquisition of multiple z-sections (multifocus microscopy). Until recently we had to sacrifice either speed or resolution for the low-light time-lapse fluorescent imaging, but now we may have it all and really observe individual molecules in their natural habitat…. And do some 3D PALM on the side.
Tuesday, November 18th, 2015
Dr. Dan Larson (NCI/NIH, LRBGE) “A single-molecule view of the central dogma.”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar about single-molecule view on transcription. Portraits of individual mRNA will be provided, as well as info about the best hunting places for the observation of gene expression in live single cells with highest temporal and spatial resolution.
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Dr. Christopher Westlake (NIH/NCI) “Cell antenna assembly studied by advanced fluorescence and electron microscopy imaging”
WHAT CAN Immuno Fluorescence AND Electron Microscopy TELL US ABOUT Rab SMALL GTPases? Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar on the role of Rab small GTPases and associated Rab effectors and GTPase regulators, SNAREs and membrane shaping proteins in ciliogenesis. Results are important for research in Polycystic kidney disease and other ciliopathies. This is a perfect example of how Electron and Light microscopy may be used for a structural and functional dissection of intracellular pathways.
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
Dr. Rolf Swenson (NIH/NHLBI) “The chemistry of optical imaging agents, experiences from the Imaging Probe Development Center”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar about NIH Imaging Probe Development Center (IPDC) that provides support for advanced molecular technologies. IPDC scientists can synthesize requested probes that are published in literature, but commercially unavailable, or are completely novel. They can do it for us – isn’t it wonderful? And do you, personally, know that such resource is at hands distance? If not, come to this talk!
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Dr. Keir Neuman (NIH/NHLBI) “Background-free imaging in vivo with fluorescent nanodiamonds applied to lymph node imaging”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar on the topic of tissue imaging studied by a state-of the art fluorescent biomarkers – nanodiamonds. If you think you don’t need them nanodiamonds, think again! The most important potential biological applications of fluorescent nanodiamonds include (1) biomolecular labeling, (2) cellular imaging, (3) tumor targeting, (4) single particle tracking, (5) long-term in vivo monitoring. And… nanodiamonds are within a reach for the NIH community.
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
Dr. Thomas Ried (NIH/NCI) “The NIH 4D Nucleome Initiative”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar on the topic of 4D nucleome. The NUCLEUS, naked, transparent – all the guts visible and classified, in its past, present, and future! Can we do it? We can do it!
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
Dr. Daniela Malide (NIH/NHLBI) “In vivo Clonal Tracking of Hematopoietic Stem and Progenitor Cells Marked by Five Fluorescent Proteins using Confocal and Multiphoton Microscopy”
Light Microscopy Interest Group (LMIG) organizers invite you to attend a seminar on the topic of clonal tracking of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells studied by a genetic combinatorial marking in five shiny colors! Yes, you can track five colors!
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
Dr. Prabuddha Sengupta (NICHD/NIH, CBMB) “Mammalian plasma membrane remodeling studied by quantitative point localization microscopy”
LMIG organizers invite you to attend a seminar on the topic of HIV biogenesis studied by a state-of the art microscopy technique. Single molecule superrersolution (point localization) microscopy based data acquisition and image analysis strategies to highlight the details of the molecular mechanism of individual steps of the viral assembly process.
Seminars in 2014
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Dr. Valentin Magidson (NCI/NIH, CCR/OD) “Insights into chromosome segregation enabled by multimodal microscopy”
Tuesday, October 14th, 2014
Dr. Jiji Chen (NCI/NIH, CCR/OD) “Single Molecule Imaging for Cellular Dynamics and Function”