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Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188
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Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical

SciencesE. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom

Biology 188

Page 2: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

History of the Microscope, Thomas E. Jones

http://www.utmem.edu/~thjones/hist/hist_mic.htm

There is one very early description of an isolated use of spectacles. Pliny the Elder wrote the following in 23-79 A.D.: "Emeralds are usually concave so that they may concentrate the visual rays. The Emperor Nero used to watch in an Emerald the gladatorial combats."

The modern reinvention of spectacles occurred around 1280-1285 in Florence, Italy

See also Molecular Expressions, a Microscope Primer at:http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/index.html

Page 3: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Janssen Microscope Was One of the First

Page 4: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

“Microscope” Named and a 2-lens "Huygens

Eyepiece Introduced in Early 1600’s

Italian microscope Galileo might have used

Page 5: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Hooke Microscope Had a Resolution of About 5 m

“Cells” Discovered

Page 6: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Leeuwenhoek Microscope Had Resolution of About 1 m

Page 7: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Leeuwenhoek's Secret Lenses:Leeuwenhoek's method of making the tiny, high-quality and high power lenses was kept secret. A study has recently been done on the few remaining copies ofLeeuwenhoek's microscopes, and it appears that someof the lenses may have been made by grinding, while the best ones were blown. Leeuwenhoek learned that when a glass bulb is blown, a small drop ofthickened glass forms at the bottom of the bulb (much like a drop sits in the bottom of a blown soap bubble.) By carefully breaking away the excess glass, this tiny drop can be used as a lens.

Page 8: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Chromatic and Spherical Aberration Limited Resolution

While the 18th century produced some great mechanicalimprovements for the microscope, making it much more sturdy and easy to use, the images obtainable remained rather blurry with colorful halos around objects. This was largely due to the problems of "Chromatic and Aspheric Aberration." The reason the single lens "simple" microscopes remained important throughout the century was that a single lens system has much less aberration because the distortion becomes synergistic with multiple lenses. This allowed simple microscopes to attain around 2 micron resolution, while the best compound microscopes were limited to around 5 microns.

Page 9: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Chromatic Aberration Corrected by the Achromatic Doublet

Chester More Hall Makes the Discovery in 1730, diddles, andJohn Dolland Learns the Secret,and Patents it in about 1759.

Page 10: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Spherical Aberration Not Solved Until 1830 by Joseph Jackson Lester

Tulley/Lister Corrected Lens Microscope, 1830's

Adjustable Objective by Ross, circa 1840

Page 11: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Abbe Discovers in 1877 The Importance of Numerical Aperture (NA = nsin) for

Resolution

Developed Apochromatic Optics

Page 12: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Microscopes in the Mid-Late 1800’s

Zeiss

Page 13: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Köhler illumination was first introduced

in 1893 by August Köhler of

the Carl Zeiss corporation as a

method of providing the

optimum specimen

illumination

Page 14: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Objective Turrets Developed and Modern Condenser Design

Parfocal Objectives Abbe condensers with Cond. Diaphragm and Turret

Page 15: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Fritz Zernike Invented Phase Contrast in 1930’s

Page 16: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Phase Contrast Gives Contrast to StructuralDetail in Transparent Specimens

In focus Image: Get phase contrast by slight out-of-focus, but loss of resolution

Page 17: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Differential Interference Microscopy (DIC) Invented by Nomarski and Smith

in 1960’s

Page 18: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Live Cell Imaging By Phase, DIC and Pol Microsocopy

Page 19: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Cellular Histology Developed Over Last 150 Years

Page 20: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Ploem Invented Epi-

Fluorescence Illuminator in Early 1970’s

Page 21: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Mono-Clonal and Affnitiy Purified Antibody Methods and Beginning of Molecular Probe

Development Began in 1970’s

Multi-Wavelength Fluorescence Microscopy: Co-Localization ofDifferentMolecules RelativeTo Cellular Structures

Page 22: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Video-Enhanced Contrast Methods Developed in Early 1980’s by Inoue and Allen Revealed Cellular Structures and

Macromolecular Complexes Invisible by Eye or Film

Page 23: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Video-Enhanced DIC Microscope System from 1985

Page 24: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

VE-DIC Motility Assays Lead to Discovery of Microtubule Motor Proteins Like Kinesin inMid-1980’s and After

Page 25: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

30 - 60 um/min

+-

Kinesin

60 - 120 um/min

Dynein

Microtubule Motor Driven Organelle Motility

Coverslip

Optical Trap

8 nm Step5 pN Stall Force100 Steps/sec at No Load1 ATP Hydrolized Per Step

Page 26: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Simulation from Ron Milligan and Ron Vale of Kinesin Mechanochemical cycle

Page 27: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Fluorescence microscopy pushed forward in early 1980’s by new fluorophores (start of Molecular Probes) and intensified video

cameras• Detect fluorescence invisible to eye or film• Quantitative fluorescence measurements• Fluorescent protein analogs of live cells• Ratio measurements for ion dynamics (e.g.

Fura 2 for calcium ion…)• Molecular dynamics from Measurements of

fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP)

Page 28: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

In early 1980’s video cameras with image intensifiers:

Page 29: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Today: e.g. Hamamatsu Orca ER Cooled CCD Camera

• Low readout noise (~8 electrons)

• High Quantum Efficiency

• Broad spectral response

• Fast readout: ~8MHz

• No distortion

• 1024x1024 pixels

• >20,000 e deep wells

Page 30: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

FRAP Scope with Cooled CCD Camera

Page 31: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Measurements of Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching (FRAP) Shows that Alexa488- or GFP-Mad2 Turns-Over Rapidly at Unattached Kinetochores ( a 20-25 sec half-life)

Howell et al., 2000, J. Cell Biol. 150:1-17.

Page 32: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

1987: John White and Brad Amos Invented Modern Laser Scanning

Confocal Fluorescence Microscope

Page 33: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

In Mid 1990’s Went from Single Photon to Multiphoton Imaging

Page 34: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

The Modern Era of Light Microscopy• New microscope optics generate brilliant images over

wide wavelengths• Computers control x-y-&z specimen position,

wavelength selection, illumination and image acquisition

• Electronic cameras quantitatively record light intensity of specimens invisible or undetectable by eye or film

• Confocal and deconvolution methods give 3-D views of cellular architectural dynamics

• New fluorescent molecular probes and biophysical methods report on the temporal and spatial activities of the molecular machinery of living cells and single molecule imaging

• Micromanipulation, ablation, force measurement

Page 35: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Modern Upright Research Light Microscope (1995)

*Bright, High Contrast Optics*Epi-Fluorescence*Phase-Contrast*Polarization*DIC*Diffraction Limited Resolution*Multiple Ports*Auto. Photography*Electronic Imaging- (Video---CCD)

Page 36: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

The Modern Era of Light Microscopy• New microscope optics generate brilliant images over

wide wavelengths• Computers control x-y-&z specimen position,

wavelength selection, illumination and image acquisition

• Electronic cameras quantitatively record light intensity of specimens invisible or undetectable by eye or film

• Confocal and deconvolution methods give 3-D views of cellular architectural dynamics

• New fluorescent molecular probes and biophysical methods report on the temporal and spatial activities of the molecular machinery of living cells and single molecule imaging

• Micromanipulation, ablation, force measurement

Page 37: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

In early 1990’s, went to semi-automated, multimode,wide-field microscopes with

cooled CCD cameras, shutters, filter wheels and computer control

Page 38: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Multi-Wavelength Immunofluorescence Microscopy

Page 39: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.
Page 40: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Confocal Scanning Head

Nikon TE300 inverted microscope

Orca ER CCD

Laser Input (fiber optic)

Filter Wheel

Focus motor

PC with MetaMorph

software

Page 41: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

High Resolution,High Signal-Noise,1Kx1K Pixel ImagesRecorded in 200ms

ImmunofluorescenceMicroscopy of Microtubules (Green) And Chromosomes (Red)In Mitotic PtK1 Cell

Page 42: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Molecular Fluorescent Probes

• Specific Fluorescent Dyes (e.g. DAPI)• Covalently bind fluorescent dye to purified

protein• Fluorescent Antibodies (e.g

immunofluorescent labeling with primary and fluorescent secondary antibodies)

• Express in cells Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) fused to protein of interest

Page 43: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.
Page 44: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Aequorea victoria

Page 45: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP)

Page 46: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

GFP Vectors from Clontech

Page 47: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Cellular Imaging is Key to Understanding Protein Function in Cells

Genomics

Proteomics Cellular Imaginge.g. GFP-Fusion Proteins

Page 48: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Alexa-488-Eb1

Bound to the Growing Ends(10 m/min)of Microtubulesin Early PrometaphaseSpindle in Xenopus EggExtracts(Jen Ternauer)

Page 49: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Green:GFP-Cdc20At Kinetochores

Red:Phase ContrastImages of PtK1Tissue Cells

Cdc20 PersistsAt KinetochoresThroughout Mitosis and Exhibits FastKinetics:FRAP t1/2 =[4 sec (attached)25 sec (unattached]

Page 50: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Biological System: Budding Yeast

• Saccharomyces cerevisiae• Short cell cycle.• Genetics.• Ease of Gfp constructs.• Conserved mitotic

processes.

Page 51: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

Budding Yeast Anaphase and Cytokinesis: GFP-Tubulin and

CFP-Myo1(Myosin)

Paul Maddox

Page 52: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.

GFP-Microtubule Dynamics in A First Division C. elegans Embryo

Karen OogemaAnd

Paul Maddox

Page 53: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.
Page 54: Light Microscopy and Electronic Imaging for the Biomedical Sciences E. D. Salmon and Kerry Bloom Biology 188.