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MIT
creates 3D images of living cell
Sunday, August 12, 2007
Images
of a cervical cancer cell taken using a new imaging
technique developed at MIT. Figures a and b show 3D images
of the cell. The green structures represent the nucleolus.
The nucleus, not visible in these images, surrounds the
nucleolus. The red areas are unidentified cell organelles.
Figures c through h show the 2D images from which the 3D
images were generated. In these images, each color
represents a different range of refractive index.
Image
/ Michael Feld laboratory, MIT
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A new imaging technique
developed at MIT has allowed scientists to create the first 3D
images of a living cell, using a method similar to the X-ray CT
scans doctors use to see inside the body.
The technique, described in a
paper published in the Aug. 12 online edition of Nature Methods,
could be used to produce the most detailed images yet of what
goes on inside a living cell without the help of fluorescent
markers or other externally added contrast agents, said Michael
Feld, director of MIT's George R. Harrison Spectroscopy
Laboratory and a professor of physics.
"Accomplishing this has
been my dream, and a goal of our laboratory, for several years,"
said Feld, senior author of the paper. "For the first time
the functional activities of living cells can be studied in their
native state."
Using the new technique, his
team has created three-dimensional images of cervical cancer
cells, showing internal cell structures. They've also imaged C.
elegans, a small worm, as well as several other cell types.
The researchers based their
technique on the same concept used to create three-dimensional CT
(computed tomography) images of the human body, which allow
doctors to diagnose and treat medical conditions. CT images are
generated by combining a series of two-dimensional X-ray images
taken as the X-ray source rotates around the object.
"You can reconstruct a 3D
representation of an object from multiple images taken from
multiple directions," said Wonshik Choi, lead author of the
paper and a Spectroscopy Laboratory postdoctoral associate.
Cells don't absorb much visible
light, so the researchers instead created their images by taking
advantage of a property known as refractive index. Every material
has a well-defined refractive index, which is a measure of how
much the speed of light is reduced as it passes through the
material. The higher the index, the slower the light travels.
The researchers made their
measurements using a technique known as interferometry, in which
a light wave passing through a cell is compared with a reference
wave that doesn't pass through it. A 2D image containing
information about refractive index is thus obtained.
A
3D image of the nematode C. elegans, taken using a new
imaging technique developed at MIT. The scale bar (lower
left) is 50 micrometers.
Image
/ Michael Feld laboratory, MIT
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To create a 3D image, the
researchers combined 100 two-dimensional images taken from
different angles. The resulting images are essentially 3D maps of
the refractive index of the cell's organelles. The entire process
took about 10 seconds, but the researchers recently reduced this
time to 0.1 seconds.
The team's image of a cervical
cancer cell reveals the cell nucleus, the nucleolus and a number
of smaller organelles in the cytoplasm. The researchers are
currently in the process of better characterizing these
organelles by combining the technique with fluorescence
microscopy and other techniques.
"One key advantage of the
new technique is that it can be used to study live cells without
any preparation," said Kamran Badizadegan, principal
research scientist in the Spectroscopy Laboratory and assistant
professor of pathology at Harvard Medical School, and one of the
authors of the paper. With essentially all other 3D imaging
techniques, the samples must be fixed with chemicals, frozen,
stained with dyes, metallized or otherwise processed to provide
detailed structural information.
"When you fix the cells,
you can't look at their movements, and when you add external
contrast agents you can never be sure that you haven't somehow
interfered with normal cellular function," said Badizadegan.
The current resolution of the
new technique is about 500 nanometers, or billionths of a meter,
but the team is working on improving the resolution. "We are
confident that we can attain 150 nanometers, and perhaps higher
resolution is possible," Feld said. "We expect this new
technique to serve as a complement to electron microscopy, which
has a resolution of approximately 10 nanometers."
Other authors on the paper are
Christopher Fang-Yen, a former postdoctoral associate; graduate
students Seungeun Oh and Niyom Lue; and Ramachandra Dasari,
principal research scientist at the Spectroscopy Laboratory.
The research was conducted at
MIT's Laser Biomedical Research Center and funded by the National
Institutes of Health and Hamamatsu Corporation.
Source:
MIT

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