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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Quantitative single molecule imaging deep in biological samples using adaptive optics / Imagerie quantitative des molécules uniques en profondeur dans les échantillons biologique à l'aide d'optiques adaptatives

Butler, Corey 04 July 2017 (has links)
La microscopie optique est un outil indispensable pour la recherche de la neurobiologie et médecine qui permet l’étude des cellules dans leur environnement natif. Les processus sous-cellulaires restent néanmoins cachés derrière les limites de la résolution optique, ce qui rend la résolution des structures plus petites que ~300nm impossible. Récemment, les techniques de la localisation des molécules individuelles (SML) ont permis le suivi des protéines de l’échelle nanométrique grâce à l’ajustement des molécules uniques à la réponse impulsionnelle du système optique. Ce processus dépend de la quantité de lumière recueilli et rend ces techniques très sensibles aux imperfections de la voie d’imagerie, nommé des aberrations, qui limitent l’application de SML aux cultures cellulaires sur les lamelles de verre. Un système commercial d’optiques adaptatives est implémenté pour compenser les aberrations du microscope, et un flux de travail est défini pour corriger les aberrations dépendant de la profondeur qui rend la 3D SML possible dans les milieux biologiques complexes. Une nouvelle méthode de SML est présentée qui utilise deux objectifs pour détecter le spectre d’émission des molécules individuelles pour des applications du suivi des particules uniques dans 5 dimensions (x,y,z,t,λ) sans compromis ni de la résolution spatiotemporelle ni du champ de vue. Pour faciliter les analyses de manière quantitative des Go de données générés, le développement des outils biochimiques, numériques et optiques est présenté. Ensemble, ces approches ont le but d’amener l’imagerie quantitative des molécules uniques dans les échantillons biologiques complexes / Optical microscopy is an indispensable tool for research in neurobiology and medicine, enabling studies of cells in their native environment. However, subcellular processes remain hidden behind the resolution limits of diffraction-limited optics which makes structures smaller than ~300nm impossible to resolve. Recently, single molecule localization (SML) and tracking has revolutionized the field, giving nanometer-scale insight into protein organization and dynamics by fitting individual fluorescent molecules to the known point spread function of the optical imaging system. This fitting process depends critically on the amount of collected light and renders SML techniques extremely sensitive to imperfections in the imaging path, called aberrations, that have limited SML to cell cultures on glass coverslips. A commercially available adaptive optics system is implemented to compensate for aberrations inherent to the microscope, and a workflow is defined for depth-dependent aberration correction that enables 3D SML in complex biological environments. A new SML technique is presented that employs a dual-objective approach to detect the emission spectrum of single molecules, enabling 5-dimensional single particle imaging and tracking (x,y,z,t,λ) without compromising spatiotemporal resolution or field of view. These acquisitions generate ~GBs of data, containing a wealth of information about the localization and environment of individual proteins. To facilitate quantitative acquisition and data analysis, the development of biochemical, software and hardware tools are presented. Together, these approaches aim to enable quantitative SML in complex biological samples.
12

Development and application of correlative STED and AFM to investigate neuronal cells

Curry, Nathan January 2018 (has links)
Over the past three decades in cellular neuroscience there has been a shift towards the view of the 'tripartite synapse', where, astrocytes -- as well as the pre-synapse and post-synapse -- are involved in synaptic signalling. The migration of astrocytes to form branched networks in the brain is, therefore, of great interest in understanding brain development and neuronal function. Migration is a complex interplay between cytoskeletal reorganisation and cell mechanical stiffness. In order to improve understanding of this process, correlative measurements of cytoskeletal organisation and mechanical stiffness are required. To investigate astrocyte migration a technique combining atomic force microscopy (AFM) with stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy was developed. First a custom STED microscope was developed. To facilitate the design of this system the theoretical performance of a range of STED techniques (cw-STED, time-gated STED, pulsed STED and RESOLFT) were compared, identifying that pulsed STED theoretically has the highest photon efficiency. A pulsed STED microscope, which uses adaptive optics, was then designed, developed and characterised. The microscope was found to achieve resolutions below 50 nm. The STED microscope was combined with a commercial AFM to study live cells. Using the recently developed SiR-actin and SiR-tubulin dyes and AFM probes optimised for live cell mechanical property studies, images of the actin and tubulin cytoskeleton were correlated with AFM topography and mechanical stiffness measurements. It was found that, in astrocytes, actin contributes significantly both to astrocyte stiffness and topography. Investigations of migrating cells showed differences in actin organisation and mechanical stiffness between the basis and leading edge of migration. A further study was performed, investigating the effects of the gap-junction protein connexin30, which is expressed during the early stages of brain development, on migration. This protein was found to inhibit the actin reorganisation and mechanical stiffness changes observed in basal conditions. Overall the combination of mechanosensitive AFM measurements with advanced microscopy, such as super-resolution, on live cells is a promising approach which will enable a range of investigations, for instance when studying cell structural remodeling during brain development or tumorigenesis.
13

Phospholamban - Identification of novel interaction partners

Kownatzki-Danger, Daniel 03 June 2021 (has links)
No description available.
14

Molecular mechanisms of the asymmetric pit-closing in clathrin-mediated endocytosis / クラスリン媒介エンドサイトーシスにおける非対称ピット閉鎖の分子機構

Yu, Yiming 24 November 2023 (has links)
京都大学 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(生命科学) / 甲第24983号 / 生博第512号 / 新制||生||68(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院生命科学研究科統合生命科学専攻 / (主査)教授 荒木 崇, 教授 鈴木 淳, 教授 谷口 雄一 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Philosophy in Life Sciences / Kyoto University / DFAM
15

Optical eigenmodes for illumination & imaging

Kosmeier, Sebastian January 2013 (has links)
This thesis exploits so called “Optical Eigenmodes” (OEi) in the focal plane of an optical system. The concept of OEi is introduced and the OEi operator approach is outlined, for which quadratic measures of the light field are expressed as real eigenvalues of an Hermitian operator. As an example, the latter is employed to locally minimise the width of a focal spot. The limitations of implementing these spots with state of the art spatial beam shaping technique are explored and a selected spot with a by 40 % decreased core width is used to confocally scan an in focus pair of holes, delivering a two-point resolution enhanced by a factor of 1.3. As a second application, OEi are utilised for fullfield imaging. Therefore they are projected onto an object and for each mode a complex coupling coefficient describing the light-sample interaction is determined. The superposition of the OEi weighted with these coefficients delivers an image of the object. Compared to a point-by-point scan of the sample with the same number of probes, i.e. scanning points, the OEi image features higher spatial resolution and localisation of object features, rendering OEi imaging a compressive imaging modality. With respect to a raster scan a compression by a factor four is achieved. Compared to ghost imaging as another fullfield imaging method, 2-3 orders of magnitude less probes are required to obtain similar images. The application of OEi for imaging in transmission as well as for fluorescence and (surface enhanced) Raman spectroscopy is demonstrated. Finally, the applicability of the OEi concept for the coherent control of nanostructures is shown. For this, OEi are generated with respect to elements on a nanostructure, such as nanoantennas or nanopads. The OEi can be superimposed in order to generate an illumination of choice, for example to address one or multiple nanoelements with a defined intensity. It is shown that, compared to addressing such elements just with a focussed beam, the OEi concept reduces illumination crosstalk in addressing individual nanoelements by up to 70 %. Furthermore, a fullfield aberration correction is inherent to experimentally determined OEi, hence enabling addressing of nanoelements through turbid media.
16

Single-Molecule Metal-Induced Energy Transfer: From Basics to Applications

Karedla, Narain 02 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.
17

Generation of Novel Photochromic GFPs: Fluorescent Probes for RESOLFT-type Microscopy at Low Light Intensities / Entwicklung neuartiger photochromer GFPs: fluoreszente Marker für die RESOLFT-basierte Mikroskopie bei geringen Lichtintensitäten

Grotjohann, Tim 18 April 2012 (has links)
No description available.

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