Showing posts with label Mike Martin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike Martin. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Powerful beams of infrared light could probe cells, diagnose diseases



In tissue from a mouse's brain, seen at lower (left) and higher magnification (right), infrared spectroscopy can distinguish astrocytes (red) from neurons (green).
 
ARIS POLYZOS & LILA LOVERGNE
http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2018/08/powerful-beams-infrared-light-could-probe-cells-diagnose-diseases

By Mitch Leslie

To identify a cell, researchers often have to abuse it—rip it from its home, douse it with toxic fixatives, doctor its DNA, or coerce it into making exotic proteins that could upset its biochemistry. Even if the cell survives, it may never be the same again. But a strong yet gentle beam of light could one day allow researchers to classify cells while leaving them unharmed and alive for additional study.
A team led by biophysicist Cynthia McMurray and physicist Michael Martin of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) in California has found that by scanning cells with an intense beam of infrared radiation produced by a synchrotron, a type of particle accelerator, they can capture a biochemical signature that reveals cells' identities.
The researchers presented early results from the method in June at a meeting in the United Kingdom, and they are now evaluating it with a 1-year pilot grant from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI). If it works, the team's spectral phenotyping technique could provide a tool for another endeavor backed by CZI: the Human Cell Atlas, an international project that aims to chart the type and location of every cell in the body. And if the synchrotron-driven method can be adapted to more modest infrared instruments available to other labs and hospitals, spectral phenotyping might one day also help diagnose illnesses, probe the cellular changes that lead to disease, and delve into embryonic development. "The tools we are putting together will blow open this field," McMurray predicts.
Scientists who are familiar with the still unpublished results call the approach promising. "I'm looking forward to seeing the research that's going to come out," says spectroscopist Peter Gardner of The University of Manchester in the United Kingdom. Chemical physicist Hugh Byrne of the Dublin Institute of Technology is impressed by how thoroughly the group is testing its approach. "It's a concerted program to demonstrate the capabilities of the technique."
Martin and McMurray like to contrast their approach with a widely used cell-identification technique: fluorescent labeling. To spur cells of a specific type to produce a label such as green fluorescent protein (GFP), scientists have to equip them with the molecule's gene. The techniques for adding DNA can alter the cells, and because GFP is foreign to them—it's originally from a jellyfish—it could also modify their physiology. Moreover, McMurray notes, researchers typically have to zap fluorescent labels with a laser to induce them to light up, which can harm or kill cells. Other techniques are no less invasive. "If you are doing labeling or staining, you are changing the true chemistry" of cells, Martin says. "We want to explore what the chemistry is, not alter it to do the measurements."
That's where infrared spectroscopy comes in. "Infrared is not invasive, so it can be used on intact tissues and living cells," McMurray says. When a sample is exposed to different wavelengths of infrared radiation, how much light of each wavelength it absorbs indicates the kinds of chemical groups it contains. Unlike fluorescent labeling, the absorption pattern usually can't reveal whether a cell is producing a specific molecule—for example, the immune receptors CD4 or CD8, which are often used to define two classes of T cells. But a cell's infrared spectrum does reveal broad types of molecules—such as fats and proteins—providing a biochemical fingerprint. As a result, "You get a much more holistic picture of the cell," Byrne says.
Martin and McMurray say standard infrared sources don't provide the sensitivity they needed, so the team turned to LBNL's Advanced Light Source synchrotron, whose infrared beam is one of the brightest in the world. It "allows us to get better resolution and fidelity," Martin says. At the June SPEC2018 conference in Glasgow, U.K., McMurray and Martin revealed they could discriminate two types of brain cells—neurons and astrocytes—in slices of brain from mice. In brain tissue from rodents with a condition mimicking Huntington disease, they could also detect an increase in lipids that indicates degeneration. In the future, the researchers plan to automate cell identification by enlisting machine learning algorithms to pick out distinguishing features of each cell type.
McMurray and her colleagues still need to determine whether a cell's spectral signature remains constant or varies with its location in the body. For potential medical uses, they also want to find out whether a human cell's infrared signature changes when a person becomes ill. So far, however, the researchers have analyzed only mouse tissues. "We wanted to make sure the method is robust," McMurray says.
One limitation of the new technique is obvious—synchrotrons are huge, expensive, and rare, and often have monthslong waiting lists. "You aren't going to be taking your synchrotron into the hospital," Gardner says. But lab machines are rapidly approaching the infrared-generating power of particle accelerators, he notes. McMurray adds that after using the synchrotron to pinpoint distinctive spectral patterns for a variety of cell types, the researchers plan to publish a catalog that would allow other scientists to compare results from their own samples, even ones captured with less discerning lab devices.
Gardner expects the project to have an impact. "They have the tools, the expertise, and the personnel to accelerate this work," he says.

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Synchrotron Infrared Structural Biology Program

http://www.src.wisc.edu/news/stories/Tomography.08.12.13.htm

Transforming Science at SRC with Nondestructive Synchrotron FTIR Spectro-Microtomography

August 12, 2013
Chris Moore, cmoore@src.wisc.edu
Researchers at the Synchrotron Radiation Center (SRC) have developed, for the first time, Fourier transform infrared spectro-microtomography.  This powerful technology allows for nondestructive three-dimensional imaging that reveals the distribution of distinctive chemistry throughout an intact biological or materials sample.  By yielding spectral data for each voxel of the 3D sample, it is now possible to easily characterize, for example, fragile cell structures throughout a cell body.  This work is reported in the Journal Nature Methods, and was the result of a collaboration between SRC Users Carol Hirschmugl from UW-Milwaukee and Michael Martin from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Carol Hirschmugl and Michael Martin
Figure 1: Corresponding authors Carol Hirschmugl and Michael Martin at an SRC Users’ meeting.  (Photo by  Chris Moore, SRC)
The development of this new technique was the result of a convergence of expertise and technology at SRC including rapid, high-quality, wide-field 2D infrared imaging at the microscale. The synchrotron light is critical, providing high signal to noise. The key to this technique is the existence of a unique instrument called the Infrared Environmental Imaging (IRENI) beamline at SRC.  Hirschmugl and SRC staff developed this high spatial-resolution infrared imaging instrument with funding from the National Science Foundation. 
Hirschmugl says, “The critical components of IRENI for IR tomography experiments are that it collects 12 beams of synchrotron infrared light to homogeneously illuminate a 128 x 128 array detector (like a CCD camera for infrared) for which high quality spectral data is rapidly collected for every pixel in parallel.”  Spectral data, which are variations of the absorption of IR light for every wavelength, are used to determine the molecular structure of a sample.
Hirschmugl and Martin applied existing computed tomography reconstruction methods (CT-scans) to frequency dependent data from the IRENI instrument yielding spectral information for every voxel.  A voxel is a 3D volume element, analogous to a pixel in 2D.  When carefully rotating a sample, 2D projections of spectrally rich data at many angles were collected. Millions of voxels of data containing  spectra data were extracted using CT reconstruction algorithms that were modified to evaluate all wavelengths, and this powerful new technology was born.
3D IR Tomography Stage
Figure 2: Test sample rotation stage at the SRC IRENI beamline used to take 3D IR Tomography data. (Photo by C. Hirschmugl, UW-M)
The significance of this new technology cannot be overstated.  “Existing methods of studying the delicate structures within a cell include slicing, staining, chemically labeling, and adding contrast agents, techniques that modify cell structures in some way,” says Hirschmugl.  With this technique scientists can now study essential cell functions within living tissue including their architecture, mechanical movement, biochemical triggers, and cell-to-cell communication, all without affecting the living system under study. 
In their journal publication, Hirschmugl and Martin showcased the measurement, 3D reconstruction, and composition of a single Zinnia elegans cell, a sliver from a fast-growing Populus tree, the internal structure and composition down the axis of a human hair, and the biochemical structure of a colony of mouse stem cells.  A better understanding of the structure and composition of cells like the Zinnia or the Populustree is needed for making biofuels from cellulose.  Analysis of a human hair revealed a distinctive biochemical construction, including different distributions of material down the axis of the hair, while imaging the stem cell colony showed the ability of this technique to analyze in 3D crucial delicate structures impossible to study in any other way.
Tomography of a Sliver of Populous Wood
Figure 3: A sliver of populous wood (a), two 3-D reconstructions (b, c), and 3 cross sections (d– i).  The analysis and reconstruction, made possible by co-authors Barbara Illman and Julia Sedlmair from the Forest Products Laboratory, was done without destroying (cutting) the sample.
Future work by Hirschmugl and Martin include plans to improve the efficiency of data collection and analysis and inclusion of advances in other fields to automate the collection, processing, and storage of large spectra tomographic data sets.  Additional improvements will also result from continued advances in mid-IR array detector technologies and synchrotron IR beamlines.  This new powerful method will facilitate a wide variety of scientific, industrial, materials, energy and medical applications ranging from understanding how to produce biofuels to the functioning of stem cells.
Co-authors participating in this experiment provided expertise in tomographic reconstructions and samples of interest and sample preparation.  They include colleagues from Forest Products Laboratory (Barbara Illman, Julia Sedlmair), UW-Milwaukee (Miriam Unger), Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Charlotte Dabat-Blondeau, Hans Bechtel, Dilworth Parkinson), University of Mainz (Jonathan Castro), Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (Marco Keiluweit), University of UW-Madison (David Buschke, Brenda Ogle), and Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (Michael Nasse). 
This research was funded by the DOE Office of Science and the National Science Foundation.  Berkeley Lab’s ALS and NERSC are funded by the DOE Office of Science.  SRC is primarily funded by the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with supplemental support from facility users and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. 
Additional Information:
News release from Berkeley Lab
http://newscenter.lbl.gov/news-releases/2013/08/05/3d-ir-images-now-in-full-color/

Nature Methods Paper (a subscription may be required)http://www.nature.com/nmeth/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nmeth.2596.html************
The Synchrotron Radiation Center (SRC) of the University of Wisconsin-Madison is a national light source facility providing infrared, ultra violet, and soft X-ray light for use in research on exotic materials, ranging from high temperature superconductors and computer chips to cancer cells.  SRC provides an environment uniquely suited to the performance of seminal research, the development of new experimental techniques and instrumentation, and the training of scientists for the future.

Monday, August 5, 2013

3D IR Images Now in Full Color

Berkeley Lab and University of Wisconsin Researchers Unveil FTIR spectro-microtomography

Coming Soon: Full color full color Infrared tomography!
Researchers at Berkeley Lab and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee have reported the first full color infrared tomography. (Image by Cait Youngquist)
Lynn Yarris (510) 486-5375
An iconic moment in the history of Hollywood movie magic was born in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz when Judy Garland as Dorothy Gale stepped out of the black and white world of Kansas into the rainbow colored world of Oz. An iconic moment in the history of infrared imaging may have been born with the announcement of the first technique to offer full color IR tomography.
A collaboration between researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM) has combined Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy with computed tomography (CT-scans) to create a non-destructive 3D imaging technique that provides molecular-level chemical information of unprecedented detail on biological and other specimens with no need to stain or alter the specimen.
“The notion of having the colors in a 3D reconstructed image being tied to real chemistry is powerful,” says Michael Martin, an infrared imaging expert at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source, a DOE national user facility. “We’ve all seen pretty 3D renderings of medical scans with colors, for example bone-colored bones, but that’s simply an artistic choice. Now we can spectrally identify the specific types of minerals within a piece of bone and assign a color to each type within the 3D reconstructed image.”
Michael Martin at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source (Photo by Roy Kaltschmidt, Berkeley Lab)
Michael Martin at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source (Photo by Roy Kaltschmidt, Berkeley Lab)
Martin is one of two corresponding authors of a paper describing this research in the journal Nature Methods titled “3D Spectral Imaging with Synchrotron Fourier Transform Infrared Spectro-microtomography.” The other corresponding author is UWM physicist Carol Hirschmugl, Director of the Laboratory for Dynamics and Structure at Surfaces and a principal investigator with UW-Madison’s Synchrotron Radiation Center (SRC).
Every individual type of molecule absorbs infrared (IR) light at specific wavelengths that are as characteristic as a human fingerprint. IR spectroscopy can be used to identify the chemical constituents of a sample and the application of the Fourier-transform algorithm allows all IR fingerprints to be simultaneously recorded. FTIR spectroscopy is especially valuable for imaging proteins and other biological samples because it is non-destructive and can be performed without altering the sample. Martin and Hirschmugl and their colleagues have combined FTIR with computed tomography, the technique for reconstructing 3D images out of multiple cross-sectional slices, to achieve what is believed to be the first demonstration of FTIR spectro-microtomography.
Carol Hirschmugl at University of Wisconsin’s Synchrotron Radiation Center
Carol Hirschmugl at University of Wisconsin’s Synchrotron Radiation Center
“FTIR spectro-microtomography involves low-energy IR photons that do not affect living systems and do not require artificial labels, contrast agents or sectioning,” Hirschmugl says. “It greatly enhances the capabilities of both FTIR spectroscopy and CT by creating a full-color spectro-microtomogram in which each voxel contains a complete spectrum (millions of spectra per sample) that provides a wealth of information for advanced spectral segregation techniques such as clustering, neural networks and principal-component analysis.”
The success of FTIR spectro-microtomography was enabled by the speed with which 2D FTIR images can be obtained at the SRC’s Infrared Environmental Imaging (IRENI) beamline. The SRC is a synchrotron radiation facility that provides infrared, ultra violet, and soft X-ray light for scientific research. IRENI offers one the nation’s highest performance IR imaging beamlines through the use of unique focal plane array detectors.
“With capabilities such as those at IRENI, we can obtain hundreds of 2D spectral images as a sample is rotated,” Martin says. “For each wavelength, we can then reconstruct a full 3D representation of the sample via computed tomography algorithms.”
Martin, Hirschmugl and their colleagues developed a motorized sample mount that precisely rotates the sample while holding it at the focus of an IR microscope. Data col­lection of 2D spectral transmission images as a function of sample angle is automated, and the computed tomography algorithms allow full reconstructions for every wavelength measured that are then reassembled into a complete spectrum for every voxel.
“We’ve been able to do a lot of exciting science with 2D FTIR imaging at the diffraction limit using synchrotron infrared beamlines, and it’s very exciting to now be able to expand this to true 3D spectroscopic imaging,” Martin says. “While the most immediate applications will be in biomedical imaging, I think full color FTIR spectro-microtomography will also be applicable to imaging 3D structures in biofuels, plants, rocks, algae, soils, agriculture and possibly even studies of art history where different layers of paints could be revealed.”
Spectro-microtomographic images of a human hair show absorptions of protein (red) and phospholipid (blue-green). Center, the medulla is observed to have little protein. Bottom, the medulla has higher concentrations of phospholipids.
Spectro-microtomographic images of a human hair show absorptions of protein (red) and phospholipid (blue-green). Center, the medulla is observed to have little protein. Bottom, the medulla has higher concentrations of phospholipids.
The Berkeley Lab and UWM researchers have already successfully applied FTIR spectro-microtomography to obtain 3D images of the molecular architecture of the cell walls in a flowering plant – zinnia – and in a woody plant – poplar. A better understanding of the chemical composition and architecture of plant cell walls is critical to the ultimate success of making biofuels from plant biomass. The collaboration also applied FTIR spectro-microtomography to study human hair, which has a distinctive biochemical construction, and an intact grouping of pluripotent mouse stem cells.
“The hair study showed that spectral reconstructions can be done on larger fully hydrated biological samples and that we can spectrally identify a fully buried portion of the sample,” Hirschmugl says. “The mouse study shows that our technique has promise not only for stem cell screening without the use of dyes or probes, but also for promoting a better understanding of the biochemical structure of differentiating stem cells in their microenvironment.”
The collaborators are continuing to improve the efficiency by which they can collect and analyze FTIR spectro-microtomography with new advances being incorporated at IRENI and at IR beamline 5.4 of Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source (ALS), a project being overseen by Martin. The work at the ALS is being done in collaboration with Berkeley Lab’s National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC).
Other co-authors of the Nature Methods paper are Charlotte Dabat-Blondeau, Miriam Unger, Julia Sedlmair, Dilworth Parkinson, Hans Bechtel, Barbara Illman, Jonathan Castro, Marco Keiluweit, David Buschke, Brenda Ogle and Michael Nasse.
This research was funded by the DOE Office of Science and the National Science Foundation. Berkeley Lab’s ALS and NERSC are funded by the DOE Office of Science.
Additional Information
For more about the Advanced Light Source go here
For more about the Synchrotron Radiation Center go here

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Berkeley Lab Researchers Discover Universal Law for Light Absorption in 2D Semiconductors

                                                     Lynn Yarris (510) 486-5375

(From left) Eli Yablonovitch, Ali Javey and Hui Fang discovered a simple law of light absorption for 2D semiconductors that should open doors to exotic new optoelectronic and photonic technologies. (Photo by Roy Kaltschmidt)
(From left) Eli Yablonovitch, Ali Javey and Hui Fang discovered a simple law of light absorption for 2D semiconductors that should open doors to exotic new optoelectronic and photonic technologies. (Photo by Roy Kaltschmidt)

From solar cells to optoelectronic sensors to lasers and imaging devices, many of today’s semiconductor technologies hinge upon the absorption of light. Absorption is especially critical for nano-sized structures at the interface between two energy barriers called quantum wells, in which the movement of charge carriers is confined to two-dimensions. Now, for the first time, a simple law of light absorption for 2D semiconductors has been demonstrated.
Working with ultrathin membranes of the semiconductor indium arsenide, a team of researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) has discovered a quantum unit of photon absorption, which they have dubbed “AQ,” that should be general to all 2D semiconductors, including compound semiconductors of the III-V family that are favored for solar films and optoelectronic devices. This discovery not only provides new insight into the optical properties of 2D semiconductors and quantum wells, it should also open doors to exotic new optoelectronic and photonic technologies.
“We used free-standing indium arsenide membranes down to three nanometers in thickness as a model material system to accurately probe the absorption properties of 2D semiconductors as a function of membrane thickness and electron band structure,” says Ali Javey, a faculty scientist in Berkeley Lab’s Materials Sciences Division and a professor of electrical engineering and computer science at the University of California (UC) Berkeley. “We discovered that the magnitude of step-wise absorptance in these materials is independent of thickness and band structure details.”
Indium arsenide is a III–V semiconductor with electron mobility and velocity that make it an outstanding candidate for future high-speed, low-power opto-electronic devices.
Indium arsenide is a III–V semiconductor with electron mobility and velocity that make it an outstanding candidate for future high-speed, low-power opto-electronic devices.
Javey is one of two corresponding authors of a paper describing this research in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). The paper is titled “Quantum of optical absorption in two-dimensional semiconductors.” Eli Yablonovitch, an electrical engineer who also holds joint appointments with Berkeley Lab and UC Berkeley, is the other corresponding author. Co-authors are Hui Fang, Hans Bechtel, Elena Plis, Michael Martin and Sanjay Krishna.
Previous work has shown that graphene, a two-dimensional sheet of carbon, has a universal value of light absorption. Javey, Yablonovitch and their colleagues have now found that a similar generalized law applies to all 2D semiconductors. This discovery was made possible by a unique process that Javey and his research group developed in which thin films of indium arsenide are transferred onto an optically transparent substrate, in this case calcium fluoride.
“This provided us with ultrathin membranes of indium arsenide, only a few unit cells in thickness, that absorb light on a substrate that absorbed no light,” Javey says. “We were then able to investigate the optical absorption properties of membranes that ranged in thickness from three to 19 nanometers as a function of band structure and thickness.”
Javey set up
In this FTIR microspectroscopy study, light absorption spectra are obtained from measured transmission and reflection spectra in which the incident light angle is perpendicular to the membrane.
Using the Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) capabilities of Beamline 1.4.3 at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source, a DOE national user facility, Javey, Yablonovitch and their co-authors measured the magnitude of light absorptance in the transition from one electronic band to the next at room temperature. They observed a discrete stepwise increase at each transition from indium arsenide membranes with an Avalue of approximately 1.7-percent per step.
“This absorption law appears to be universal for all 2D semiconductor systems,” says Yablonovitch. “Our results add to the basic understanding of electron–photon interactions under strong quantum confinement and provide a unique insight toward the use of 2D semiconductors for novel photonic and optoelectronic applications.”
This research was supported by DOE’s Office of Science and the National Science Foundation.
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Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory addresses the world’s most urgent scientific challenges by advancing sustainable energy, protecting human health, creating new materials, and revealing the origin and fate of the universe. Founded in 1931, Berkeley Lab’s scientific expertise has been recognized with 13 Nobel prizes. The University of California manages Berkeley Lab for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science. For more, visit www.lbl.gov.
The DOE Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit science.energy.gov.
The Advanced Light Source is a third-generation synchrotron light source producing light in the x-ray region of the spectrum that is a billion times brighter than the sun. A DOE national user facility, the ALS attracts scientists from around the world and supports its users in doing outstanding science in a safe environment. For more information visit www-als.lbl.gov/.The Advanced Light Source is a third-generation synchrotron light source producing light in the x-ray region of the spectrum that is a billion times brighter than the sun. A DOE national user facility, the ALS attracts scientists from around the world and supports its users in doing outstanding science in a safe environment. For more information visit http://www.als.lbl.gov/.