Seb Stephens |
Hi all, I am studying structures that are similar to focal adhesions called
podosomes. They are rich in actin and make an actin core of about 1 micron in diameter. These podosomes have a lifetime about about 2 mins (that is, it takes 2 mins for a "dot" in the cell to become visible and dissappear again). At this stage I use a CSU-X on an Andor system (63x, binned 2x2 Ocra ER) but I find it very hard to resolve because there is an "actin cloud" that is found within the podosome belt (which you see surrounds the gigantic osteoclast cell). I will be trying TIRF soon. I also do not have any software for analyzing this (apart from going frame by frame in image j). As such, would you have any suggestions as to the best way of acquiring the images (CSU, point scanner etc) and software for this work? I would also be interested in communicating with anyone who does this sort of particle tracking. Regards Sebastien |
RICHARD BURRY |
Sebastien
We are using a Visitech Infinity3 2D array confocal with a Hamamatsu C9100 EM-13 camera (not binned) and see the podosome rings in images taken from z stacks. Image time is 150 to 300 msec. Dick ----- Original Message ----- From: Sebastien Stephens <[hidden email]> Date: Monday, July 6, 2009 4:00 pm Subject: Podosome lifetime - which scope and software? To: [hidden email] > Hi all, I am studying structures that are similar to focal > adhesions called > podosomes. They are rich in actin and make an actin core of > about 1 micron in > diameter. > > These podosomes have a lifetime about about 2 mins (that is, it > takes 2 mins > for a "dot" in the cell to become visible and dissappear > again). > > At this stage I use a CSU-X on an Andor system (63x, binned 2x2 > Ocra ER) > but I find it very hard to resolve because there is an "actin > cloud" that is > found within the podosome belt (which you see surrounds the > gigantic > osteoclast cell). I will be trying TIRF soon. > > I also do not have any software for analyzing this (apart from > going frame by > frame in image j). > > As such, would you have any suggestions as to the best way of > acquiring the > images (CSU, point scanner etc) and software for this work? > > I would also be interested in communicating with anyone who does > this sort of > particle tracking. > > Regards Sebastien > > > -- > BEGIN-ANTISPAM-VOTING-LINKS > ------------------------------------------------------ > > Teach CanIt if this mail (ID 905269719) is spam: > Spam: > https://antispam.osu.edu/b.php?c=s&i=905269719&m=676197aabe00Not > spam: https://antispam.osu.edu/b.php?c=n&i=905269719&m=676197aabe00 > Forget vote: > https://antispam.osu.edu/b.php?c=f&i=905269719&m=676197aabe00---- > -------------------------------------------------- > END-ANTISPAM-VOTING-LINKS > Richard W. Burry, Ph.D. Department of Neuroscience, College of Medicine Campus Microscopy and Imaging Facility, Director The Ohio State University Associate Editor, Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry 277 Biomedical Research Tower 460 West Twelfth Avenue Columbus, Ohio 43210 Voice 614.292.2814 Cell 614.638.3345 Fax 614.247.8849 |
Rietdorf, Jens |
In reply to this post by Seb Stephens
Sebastien,
I have been using TIR to image hemidesmosomes (which partly resemble podosomes), they are very close to the cover glass and TIR gives an excellent contrast, you can nicely follow the structures if actin is labeled. Automatic tracking should be easy because the structures do not move fast, if at all. Cheers, jens -----Original Message----- From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Sebastien Stephens Sent: Monday, July 06, 2009 9:49 PM To: [hidden email] Subject: Podosome lifetime - which scope and software? Hi all, I am studying structures that are similar to focal adhesions called podosomes. They are rich in actin and make an actin core of about 1 micron in diameter. These podosomes have a lifetime about about 2 mins (that is, it takes 2 mins for a "dot" in the cell to become visible and dissappear again). At this stage I use a CSU-X on an Andor system (63x, binned 2x2 Ocra ER) but I find it very hard to resolve because there is an "actin cloud" that is found within the podosome belt (which you see surrounds the gigantic osteoclast cell). I will be trying TIRF soon. I also do not have any software for analyzing this (apart from going frame by frame in image j). As such, would you have any suggestions as to the best way of acquiring the images (CSU, point scanner etc) and software for this work? I would also be interested in communicating with anyone who does this sort of particle tracking. Regards Sebastien |
Watkins, Simon C |
In reply to this post by RICHARD BURRY
I have been imaging podosomes in dendrititic cells for a good while now and TIRF is really the only way to go IMHO
Simon Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T From: RICHARD BURRY Date: Mon, 6 Jul 2009 16:37:56 -0400 To: [hidden email]<[hidden email]> Subject: Re: Podosome lifetime - which scope and software? Sebastien We are using a Visitech Infinity3 2D array confocal with a Hamamatsu C9100 EM-13 camera (not binned) and see the podosome rings in images taken from z stacks. Image time is 150 to 300 msec. Dick ----- Original Message ----- From: Sebastien Stephens <[hidden email]> Date: Monday, July 6, 2009 4:00 pm Subject: Podosome lifetime - which scope and software? To: [hidden email] > Hi all, I am studying structures that are similar to focal > adhesions called > podosomes. They are rich in actin and make an actin core of > about 1 micron in > diameter. > > These podosomes have a lifetime about about 2 mins (that is, it > takes 2 mins > for a "dot" in the cell to become visible and dissappear > again). > > At this stage I use a CSU-X on an Andor system (63x, binned 2x2 > Ocra ER) > but I find it very hard to resolve because there is an "actin > cloud" that is > found within the podosome belt (which you see surrounds the > gigantic > osteoclast cell). I will be trying TIRF soon. > > I also do not have any software for analyzing this (apart from > going frame by > frame in image j). > > As such, would you have any suggestions as to the best way of > acquiring the > images (CSU, point scanner etc) and software for this work? > > I would also be interested in communicating with anyone who does > this sort of > particle tracking. > > Regards Sebastien > > > -- > BEGIN-ANTISPAM-VOTING-LINKS > ------------------------------------------------------ > > Teach CanIt if this mail (ID 905269719) is spam: > Spam: > https://antispam.osu.edu/b.php?c=s&i=905269719&m=676197aabe00Not > spam: https://antispam.osu.edu/b.php?c=n&i=905269719&m=676197aabe00 > Forget vote: > https://antispam.osu.edu/b.php?c=f&i=905269719&m=676197aabe00---- > -------------------------------------------------- > END-ANTISPAM-VOTING-LINKS > Richard W. Burry, Ph.D. Department of Neuroscience, College of Medicine Campus Microscopy and Imaging Facility, Director The Ohio State University Associate Editor, Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry 277 Biomedical Research Tower 460 West Twelfth Avenue Columbus, Ohio 43210 Voice 614.292.2814 Cell 614.638.3345 Fax 614.247.8849 |
Seb Stephens |
In reply to this post by Seb Stephens
Hi Richard,
The system I use actually does have an ANDOR camera very similar to the one you mentioned. I will indeed test this sometime and discuss it further with my core manager. Regards Sebastien |
Seb Stephens |
In reply to this post by Seb Stephens
Hi Jens,
Thanks for your reply. I am using GFP-actin to track these podosomes. Im not sure whether I should use a labelling kit or a commercially available labelled actin which which is far smaller than GFP! I will be trying this. Im wondering what software you use for auto tracking? Furthermore, would you be able to send one of your videos? Id like to see what your structures look like on TIRF. Of course, I understand that you may not be able to share your videos which is fine! regards |
Seb Stephens |
In reply to this post by Seb Stephens
Simon,
What software do you use to track your pdosomes? Would you be able to send me one of your videos so I can what you are seeing and compare to what Im seeing? Where are you located? Seb On Mon, 6 Jul 2009 18:41:38 -0400, Watkins, Simon C <[hidden email]> wrote: >I have been imaging podosomes in dendrititic cells for a good while now and TIRF is really the only way to go IMHO >Simon > >Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T |
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