104 research outputs found
Line-scanning microphotolysis for diffraction-limited measurements of lateral diffusion
Fluorescence microphotolysis was combined with confocal laser-scanning microscopy to yield a method, herein referred to as line-scanning microphotolysis (LINESCAMP), for the measurement of molecular transport at a lateral resolution of approximately 0.34 microns and a temporal resolution of approximately 0.5 ms. A confocal microscope was operated in the line scan mode, while the laser beam power could be switched during scanning between low monitoring and high photolysing levels in less then a microsecond. The number and location of line segments to be photolysed could be freely determined. The length of the photolysed segments could be also chosen and was only limited by diffraction. Together with instrumentation a new, completely general, theoretical framework for the evaluation of diffusion measurements was developed. Based on the numerical simulation of diffusion processes employing a modified Crank-Nicholson scheme, the theory could be applied to any photobleaching geometry and profile as the initial condition and took into account the convolution with the microscope point spread function. With small diffraction-limited areas, the method yielded accurate values for diffusion coefficients in the range between approximately 10(-4) and 1 micron2 s-1. A first application of the method to the diffusion of a fluorescently labeled tracer inside the cell nucleus showed the potential of the method for the study of complex biological systems
Transglutaminase activity in the eye: cross-linking in epithelia and connective tissue structures
TGase 2 appears to be an important cross-linker and thus stabilizer of ocular connective tissue. In particular, the zonular fibers are a major target for TGase 2. This is of relevance in hereditary microfibrillopathies such as Marfan syndrome, which exhibits distinct ocular manifestations such as elongated bulbus, retinal detachment, and subluxation of the lens. Purified or recombinant TGase might be of therapeutic use in the future
Indirect X-ray detectors based on inkjet-printed photodetectors with a screen-printed scintillator layer
Organic photodetectors (PDs) based on printing technologies will allow to expand the current field of PD applications toward large-area and flexible applications in areas such as medical imaging, security, and quality control, among others. Inkjet printing is a powerful digital tool for the deposition of smart and functional materials on various substrates, allowing the development of electronic devices such as PDs on various substrates. In this work, inkjet-printed PD arrays, based on the organic thin-film transistor architecture, have been developed and applied for the indirect detection of X-ray radiation using a scintillator ink as an X-ray absorber. The >90% increase of the photocurrent of the PDs under X-ray radiation, from about 53 nA without the scintillator film to about 102 nA with the scintillator located on top of the PD, proves the suitability of the developed printed device for X-ray detection applicationsThe authors thank FEDER funds through the COMPETE 2020 Programme and National Funds through FCT-Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology under Strategic Funding UID/FIS/04650/2013 and projects PTDC/EEI-SII/5582/2014, PTDC/CTM-ENE/5387/2014 and in the framework of EuroNanoMed 2016 call, Project LungChek ENMed/0049/2016. J.O. and V.C. thank the FCT for the SFRH/BD/98219/2013 and SFRH/BPD/97739/2013 grants, respectively. The authors acknowledge funding by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) through the project MAT2016-76039-C4-3-R. Financial support from the Basque Government Industry Department under the ELKARTEK program is also acknowledged. The authors thank Iain McCulloch and Martin Heeney from Flexink for providing the OSC. Dirk Rittrich (Department Layer Deposition at Fraunhofer ENAS) is acknowledged for the FIB/SEM analysis and the sample preparation. R.D.R acknowledges the DFG Unit FOR1317 SMINT, the Cluster of Excellence, and the Tomsk Polytechnic University Competitiveness Enhancement Program grant TPU CEP_IHTP_73\2017. This work was performed in the context of the European COST Action MP1302 Nanospectroscopy.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Nucleocytoplasmic transport: a thermodynamic mechanism
The nuclear pore supports molecular communication between cytoplasm and
nucleus in eukaryotic cells. Selective transport of proteins is mediated by
soluble receptors, whose regulation by the small GTPase Ran leads to cargo
accumulation in, or depletion from the nucleus, i.e., nuclear import or nuclear
export. We consider the operation of this transport system by a combined
analytical and experimental approach. Provocative predictions of a simple model
were tested using cell-free nuclei reconstituted in Xenopus egg extract, a
system well suited to quantitative studies. We found that accumulation capacity
is limited, so that introduction of one import cargo leads to egress of
another. Clearly, the pore per se does not determine transport directionality.
Moreover, different cargo reach a similar ratio of nuclear to cytoplasmic
concentration in steady-state. The model shows that this ratio should in fact
be independent of the receptor-cargo affinity, though kinetics may be strongly
influenced. Numerical conservation of the system components highlights a
conflict between the observations and the popular concept of transport cycles.
We suggest that chemical partitioning provides a framework to understand the
capacity to generate concentration gradients by equilibration of the
receptor-cargo intermediary.Comment: in press at HFSP Journal, vol 3 16 text pages, 1 table, 4 figures,
plus Supplementary Material include
Structure-guided evolution of cyan fluorescent proteins towards a quantum yield of 93%
Cyan variants of green fluorescent protein are widely used as donors in Förster resonance energy transfer experiments. The popular, but modestly bright, Enhanced Cyan Fluorescent Protein (ECFP) was sequentially improved into the brighter variants Super Cyan Fluorescent Protein 3A (SCFP3A) and mTurquoise, the latter exhibiting a high-fluorescence quantum yield and a long mono-exponential fluorescence lifetime. Here we combine X-ray crystallography and excited-state calculations to rationalize these stepwise improvements. The enhancement originates from stabilization of the seventh β-strand and the strengthening of the sole chromophore-stabilizing hydrogen bond. The structural analysis highlighted one suboptimal internal residue, which was subjected to saturation mutagenesis combined with fluorescence lifetime-based screening. This resulted in mTurquoise2, a brighter variant with faster maturation, high photostability, longer mono-exponential lifetime and the highest quantum yield measured for a monomeric fluorescent protein. Together, these properties make mTurquoise2 the preferable cyan variant of green fluorescent protein for long-term imaging and as donor for Förster resonance energy transfer to a yellow fluorescent protein
Single-molecule imaging to characterise the transport mechanism of the Nuclear Pore Complex
In the eukaryotic cell, a large macromolecular channel, known as the Nuclear Pore
Complex (NPC), mediates all molecular transport between the nucleus and cytoplasm.
In recent years, single-molecule fluorescence (SMF) imaging has emerged as a
powerful tool to study the molecular mechanism of transport through the NPC. More
recently, techniques such as Single-Molecule Localisation Microscopy (SMLM) have
enabled the spatial and temporal distribution of cargos, transport receptors and even
structural components of the NPC to be determined with nanometre accuracy. In this
protocol, we describe a method to study the position and/or motion of individual
molecules transiting through the NPC with high spatial and temporal precision
Protein Diffusion in Mammalian Cell Cytoplasm
We introduce a new method for mesoscopic modeling of protein diffusion in an entire cell. This method is based on the construction of a three-dimensional digital model cell from confocal microscopy data. The model cell is segmented into the cytoplasm, nucleus, plasma membrane, and nuclear envelope, in which environment protein motion is modeled by fully numerical mesoscopic methods. Finer cellular structures that cannot be resolved with the imaging technique, which significantly affect protein motion, are accounted for in this method by assigning an effective, position-dependent porosity to the cell. This porosity can also be determined by confocal microscopy using the equilibrium distribution of a non-binding fluorescent protein. Distinction can now be made within this method between diffusion in the liquid phase of the cell (cytosol/nucleosol) and the cytoplasm/nucleoplasm. Here we applied the method to analyze fluorescence recovery after photobleach (FRAP) experiments in which the diffusion coefficient of a freely-diffusing model protein was determined for two different cell lines, and to explain the clear difference typically observed between conventional FRAP results and those of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS). A large difference was found in the FRAP experiments between diffusion in the cytoplasm/nucleoplasm and in the cytosol/nucleosol, for all of which the diffusion coefficients were determined. The cytosol results were found to be in very good agreement with those by FCS
Light Sheet Microscopy for Single Molecule Tracking in Living Tissue
Single molecule observation in cells and tissue allows the analysis of physiological processes with molecular detail, but it still represents a major methodological challenge. Here we introduce a microscopic technique that combines light sheet optical sectioning microscopy and ultra sensitive high-speed imaging. By this approach it is possible to observe single fluorescent biomolecules in solution, living cells and even tissue with an unprecedented speed and signal-to-noise ratio deep within the sample. Thereby we could directly observe and track small and large tracer molecules in aqueous solution. Furthermore, we demonstrated the feasibility to visualize the dynamics of single tracer molecules and native messenger ribonucleoprotein particles (mRNPs) in salivary gland cell nuclei of Chironomus tentans larvae up to 200 µm within the specimen with an excellent signal quality. Thus single molecule light sheet based fluorescence microscopy allows analyzing molecular diffusion and interactions in complex biological systems
Altered Trabecular Bone Structure and Delayed Cartilage Degeneration in the Knees of Collagen VI Null Mice
Mutation or loss of collagen VI has been linked to a variety of musculoskeletal abnormalities, particularly muscular dystrophies, tissue ossification and/or fibrosis, and hip osteoarthritis. However, the role of collagen VI in bone and cartilage structure and function in the knee is unknown. In this study, we examined the role of collagen VI in the morphology and physical properties of bone and cartilage in the knee joint of Col6a1−/− mice by micro-computed tomography (microCT), histology, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and scanning microphotolysis (SCAMP). Col6a1−/− mice showed significant differences in trabecular bone structure, with lower bone volume, connectivity density, trabecular number, and trabecular thickness but higher structure model index and trabecular separation compared to Col6a1+/+ mice. Subchondral bone thickness and mineral content increased significantly with age in Col6a1+/+ mice, but not in Col6a1−/− mice. Col6a1−/− mice had lower cartilage degradation scores, but developed early, severe osteophytes compared to Col6a1+/+mice. In both groups, cartilage roughness increased with age, but neither the frictional coefficient nor compressive modulus of the cartilage changed with age or genotype, as measured by AFM. Cartilage diffusivity, measured via SCAMP, varied minimally with age or genotype. The absence of type VI collagen has profound effects on knee joint structure and morphometry, yet minimal influences on the physical properties of the cartilage. Together with previous studies showing accelerated hip osteoarthritis in Col6a1−/− mice, these findings suggest different roles for collagen VI at different sites in the body, consistent with clinical data
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