Microscopy: Principles and Advances



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Transcription:

Microscopy: Principles and Advances Chandrashekhar V. Kulkarni University of Central Lancashire, Preston, United kingdom May, 2014 University of Ljubljana

Academic Background 2005-2008: PhD-Chemical Biology Prof. Richard Templer, Dr. Oscar Ces, Prof. John Seddon (Chemistry) Prof. So Iwata (Biochemistry), United Kingdom 2008-2010: Postdoctoral Research Assistant Prof. Otto Glatter, Scattering Methods Research Group Chemistry-University of Graz, Austria 2011-2011: Postdoctoral Research Associate Prof. Matthias Weiss, Experimental Physics I Physics-University of Bayreuth, Germany 2012-2013: Postdoctoral Research Associate Dr. Ulrich F. Keyser, Nanopores Research Group Physics-University of Cambridge, United Kingdom 2013- : Assistant Professor and Group Leader Lipid Nanostructures Group, Centre For Materials Science University of Central Lancashire, United Kingdom 2

Microscopic Eye! Can you see it with eyes? Can you make it seeing with eyes? Clean water Clean? http://www.cracked.com/article_19681_8-amazing-works-art-you-need-microscope-to-appreciate.html 3

Why to Use Microscopes? 1.See things (objects,orgamisms) that are not visible with naked eye 2.Study morphological properties at micro- and nano-scale lengths 3.Collect images at high resolution 4.Observe live phenomena (live cells, chemical reaction) under microscope 4

Detection Limits Eye: 0.1 mm Human hair Microscope: x1000 Blood Cells DNA, organelles Electron Microscope: x1000x1000 http://bsp.med.harvard.edu/node/219 5

Types of Microscopes Light Types based on what interacts with sample Electrons Probe scanning tunneling microscopy scanning near-field optical microscopy Sample http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/file:microscopesoverview.svg 6

Light Microscopes Light source Lens: to focus light on sample Sample Transmitted light Stacking of lenses to increase magnification Lens: to focus light into an eye, objective, camera eye, objective, camera https://casweb.ou.edu/pbell/histology/captions/microscopy/microscope.parts.html 7

Further Types of Light Microscopes Bright Field: simplest, used for basic observations Dark Field: better contrast but reduces light illumination Polarized Light: anisotropic samples, based on birefringence Phase contrast: uses difference in refractive indices Shrikhand with Nuts, Saffron 8

Melting and Re-crystallization of Lipids/Fats Liquid Crystalline Fat Structures Melting of Fat Structures 50µm Annealing at 40 C Fat Re-crystallization at Room Temp. (cross polarized light) 2 minutes 6 hours Kulkarni C.V.* (2012) Nanoscale, 4, 5779-5791 9

Fluorescence Microscopy Fluorescent Microscopy ExcitedState Excite with high energy light, they emit light of a different, lower frequency (long wavelength) Giant Unilamellar Vesicles W/O nanostructured emulsion Kulkarni C.V.* (2012) Nanoscale, 4, 5779-5791 10

Other than Visible Light Microscopy X-ray Microscope UV Microscope Visible Light Microscope IR Microscope/Raman Microscope http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/file:electromagnetic-spectrum.svg 11

Confocal Microscopy Limitations of wide field microscopes: Low resolution, Out of focus light, Diffracted light Only in focus light is detected Special type of mirror 3-D image reconstruction Study plane Z-stacking http://www.ncl.ac.uk/bioimaging/techniques/confocal/ http://www.mattek.com/epiairway/data-sheet http://bioimagel.com/3-d_operations 12

Electron Microscopy Surface Structure by SEM Electromagnets Internal Structure by TEM http://bsp.med.harvard.edu/node/221 13

Examples: Electron Microscopy Eye surface of housefly TEM SEM Cryo-to keep structure intact (biological and soft samples) Cryo-EM image of GroEL at 50,000X magnification. The GroEL molecular machine that functions in folding of many proteins in cells. http://bsp.med.harvard.edu/node/216 14

Probe Microscopy AFM: Atomic Force Microscopy http://www.eng.utah.edu/~lzang/images/lecture_10_afm.pdf 15

Cantilever Modes of Cantilever Contact mode Non-contact mode 16

Images by Atomic Force Microscopy Surface topography Micro- to nano-scale informaton Micro- to nano-scale information Nanoscale dimensions 17

Advances in Microscopy Techniques with Confocal Laser Scanning Microscopy: Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS) Live Cell Imaging Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Microscopy (FLIM) Forster Resonance energy Transfer (FRET) Fluorescence Recovery After Photo-bleaching (FRAP) Super-resolution Microscopy Total Internal Reflection Microscopy (reaching nano by an eye) Mutiphoton Microscopy 18

Contact Details Dr. Chandrashekhar V. Kulkarni Lipid Nanostructures Group Centre for Materials Science School of Forensic and Investigative Sciences University of Central Lancashire Preston PR1 2HE United Kingdom. Telephone: +44-1772-89-4339 Email: cvkulkarni@uclan.ac.uk Webpage: http://lipidnanostructuresgroup.weebly.com/ Thank You! 19