81 |
Development of Bright Staining Reagents for Flow Cytometry and Fluorescence MicroscopyReiber, Thorge Rasmus 13 August 2024 (has links)
Die Durchflusszytometrie und Fluoreszenzmikroskopie sind zentrale Techniken zur Analyse von Zellen, Geweben und Organen. Besonders in der Immunologie werden sie zur Identifizierung und Charakterisierung von Biomolekülen mittels fluoreszenzmarkierter Antikörper verwendet. Fluoreszenzmarker müssen je nach Anwendung hohe Helligkeit, geringe Größe und minimierte Löschung des Signals aufweisen. Stark markierte Konstrukte leiden jedoch oft unter Fluoreszenzlöschung oder großen Molekularmassen.
Diese Arbeit untersucht verzweigtes Polyethylenglykol (PEG) als Träger für Fluorophore. PEG-Ketten wurden als räumliche Trennmittel identifiziert und an Aminodextran gekoppelt, wodurch hochgradig multimerisierte Fluorophor-PEG-Dextran-Zwischenprodukte entstanden. Diese Konjugate, gekoppelt mit Antikörpern, zeigen hohe Fluoreszenzintensität und wurden bei der Detektion von CAR SUP-T1-Zellen erfolgreich eingesetzt. PEG-basierte Reagenzien durchdringen jedoch oft die Zellmembran nicht, was für intrazelluläre Ziele und größere Gewebe wichtig ist. Sequentielle Multiplex-Analysen sind durch unvollständige Spaltung und Restsignale problematisch.
Deshalb wurden synthetische Peptide als Rückgrat für die Fluorophor-Multimerisierung untersucht. Diese Konstrukte, verbunden mit Nanokörpern, zeigten erhöhte Helligkeit und Gewebepenetration in der Lichtblattmikroskopie von Mausorganen. Zudem wurde ein dualer Entfernungsmechanismus in die REAdyelease-Technologie integriert. Basierend auf Oligonukleotiden, Disulfiden oder Peptiden in Kombination mit Aminodextran konnte eine schnellere Signalreduktion ermöglicht werden. Dies wurde in der Konfokalmikroskopie an einer Pankreastumorzelllinie demonstriert. / Flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy are crucial for analyzing cells and tissues, especially in immunology, where immunofluorescence is used for identifying, visualizing, and characterizing biomolecules with fluorescently labeled antibodies. These labels must meet various requirements: high brightness, small size, and the ability to be rendered non-fluorescent. However, highly labeled constructs often suffer from fluorescence self-quenching or high molecular masses, limiting their effectiveness.
This work demonstrates that branched polyethylene glycol (PEG) serves as an efficient fluorophore multimerization platform for protein labeling. I explored factors critical for preventing fluorophore self-quenching in multi-fluorophore systems. Fluorescent PEGs were multimerized on an amino-dextran scaffold, generating highly multimerized fluorophore-PEG-dextran intermediates. When conjugated to antibodies, these intermediates allowed bright labeling of biomarkers on cells and tissues and were successfully used in detecting CAR SUP-T1 cells.
Despite their strengths, PEG-based reagents often lack deep tissue penetration, essential for intracellular targets and 3D organ imaging. To enhance tissue penetration, I designed small peptide-based backbones for fluorophore multimerization. These constructs, coupled with nanobodies, produced homogeneous fluorescent conjugates that quickly penetrated mouse organs and enabled bright staining in light-sheet microscopy.
The final part of the thesis focuses on synthesizing labels for cyclic immunofluorescence. I addressed the issue of incomplete label removal by creating erasable conjugates with two release sites. Fluorescent conjugates based on oligonucleotides, disulfides, or peptides combined with amino-dextran can be rapidly erased from labeled epitopes using a dual-release approach. This method was demonstrated in confocal microscopy and used for iterative imaging of biomarkers on a sample of a pancreatic tumor cell line.
|
82 |
Characterization of heterogeneous diffusion in confined soft matterTäuber, Daniela 26 October 2011 (has links) (PDF)
A new method, probability distribution of diffusivities (time scaled square displacements between succeeding video frames), was developed to analyze single molecule tracking (SMT) experiments. This method was then applied to SMT experiments on ultrathin liquid tetrakis(2-ethylhexoxy)silane (TEHOS) films on Si wafer with 100 nm thermally grown oxide, and on thin semectic liquid crystal films. Spatial maps of diffusivities from SMT experiments on 220 nm thick semectic liquid crystal films reveal structure related dynamics. The SMT experiments on ultrathin TEHOS films were complemented by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS). The observed strongly heterogeneous single molecule dynamics within those films can be explained by a three-layer model consisting of (i) dye molecules adsorbed to the substrate, (ii) slowly diffusing molecules in the laterally heterogeneous near-surface region of 1 - 2 molecular diameters, and (iii) freely diffusing dye molecules in the upper region of the film. FCS and SMT experiments reveal a strong influence of substrate heterogeneity on SM dynamics. Thereby chemisorption to substrate surface silanols plays an important role. Vertical mean first passage times (mfpt) in those films are below 1 µs. This appears as fast component in FCS autocorrelation curves, which further contain a contribution from lateral diffusion and from adsorption events. Therefore, the FCS curves are approximated by a tri-component function, which contains an exponential term related to the mfpt, the correlation function for translational diffusion and a stretched exponential term for the broad distribution of adsorption events. Lateral diffusion coefficients obtained by FCS on 10 nm thick TEHOS films, thereby, are effective diffusion coefficients from dye transients in the focal area. They strongly depend on the substrate heterogeneity. Variation of the frame times for the acquisition of SMT experiments in steps of 20 ms from 20 ms to 200 ms revealed a strong dependence of the corresponding probability distributions of diffusivities on time, in particular in the range between 20 ms and 100 ms. This points to average dwell times of the dye molecules in at least one type of the heterogeneous regions (e.g. on and above silanol clusters) in the range of few tens of milliseconds.
Furthermore, time series of SM spectra from Nile Red in 25 nm thick poly-n-alkyl-methacrylate (PnAMA) films were studied. In analogy to translational diffusion, spectral diffusion (shifts in energetic positions of SM spectra) can be studied by probability distributions of spectral diffusivities, i.e. time scaled square energetic displacements. Simulations were run and analyzed to study contributions from noise and fitting uncertainty to spectral diffusion. Furthermore the effect of spectral jumps during acquisition of a SM spectrum was investigated. Probability distributions of spectral diffusivites of Nile Red probing vitreous PnAMA films reveal a two-level system. In contrast, such probability distributions obtained from Nile Red within a 25 nm thick poly-n-butylmethacrylate film around glass transition and in the melt state, display larger spectral jumps. Moreover, for longer alkyl side chains a solvent shift to higher energies is observed, which supports the idea of nanophase separation within those polymers.
|
83 |
Visualisierung und Charakterisierung der S-Protein vermittelten Fusion von CoronavirenEifart, Patricia 28 February 2008 (has links)
Die Fusionsreaktion des Coronavirus MHV wird vom S-Protein vermittelt. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde der Eintrittsweg von MHV-A59 in Mauszellen untersucht. Die Infektivität kann durch lysosomotrope Substanzen und Inhibitoren der Clathrin-abhängigen Endozytose gehemmt werden. Der Eintritt von MHV-A59 in Mauszellen erfolgt über die Clathrin-abhängige Endozytose und setzt die anschließende Fusion der viralen und zellulären Membran bei niedrigem pH-Wert voraus. Fluoreszenzmikroskopische Studien zur Interaktion fluoreszenzmarkierter MHV-A59 Partikel mit Mauszellen bestätigen, dass MHV-A59 über Endozytose aufgenommen wird. Nach Bindung der Viren an die Zellen und anschließende Erniedrigung des pH-Wertes kommt es zur Färbung der Plasmamembran. Die Erniedrigung des pH-Wertes in Abwesenheit des Rezeptors führt zu einer irreversiblen Konformationsumwandlung im viralen Fusionsprotein, die die Inaktivierung der Fusionsaktivität und den Verlust der Infektivität zur Folge hat. Die Ergebnisse deuten auf die Beteiligung des endozytotischen Weges für den viralen Eintritt von MHV-A59 hin. Ein niedriger pH-Wert eines zellulären endosomalen Kompartiments induziert vermutlich die Konformationsänderung im S-Protein und löst die Fusionsreaktion aus. Ein vorläufiges 3D-Modell des S-Proteins von MHV-A59 konnte erstellt werden. Darüber hinaus wurde die Struktur und Fusionsfähigkeit des S-Proteins von SARS-CoV analysiert. Ein Zell-Zell-Fusionsassay konnte nachweisen, dass die Fusion zwischen S-Protein und ACE2-exprimierenden Zellen sowohl abhängig vom pH-Wert als auch von der proteolytischen Spaltung in S1- und S2-Untereinheit ist und durch Erniedrigung des pH-Wertes zusätzlich verstärkt werden kann. Im abschließenden Teil der Arbeit wurde auf Basis theoretischer Untersuchungen eine Vorhersage des mutmaßlichen Fusionspeptids des S-Proteins von MHV-A59, welches alle wesentlichen Merkmale eines internen Fusionspeptids aufweist, vorgenommen. Es liegt nahe der "Heptad-Repeat" (HR) Domäne HR1. / Fusion of the Coronavirus MHV-A59 is mediated by the viral S-protein. The entry pathway of MHV-A59 into murine cells was studied in this work. Infection was strongly inhibited by lysosomotropic compounds and substances interfering with clathrin-dependent endocytosis, suggesting that MHV-A59 is taken up via endocytosis and delivered to acidic compartments. Fluorescence microscopy of labeled MHV-A59 confirmed that the virus is taken up via endocytosis. When the virus was bound to cells and the pH was lowered to 5.0, we observed a strong labeling of the plasma membrane. Electron microscopy revealed low pH triggered conformational alterations of the S-ectodomain. These alterations are likely to be irreversible because low pH-treatment of viruses caused an irreversible loss of fusion activity. The results imply that endocytosis plays a major role in MHV-A59 infection and that the acidic pH of the endosomal compartment triggers a conformational change of the S-protein mediating fusion. Furthermore the conformation of the trimeric spike protein of the murine hepatitis virus A59 was characterized by cryoelectron microscopy. A preliminary 3D-reconsruction of the native structure could be accomplished. Besides we studied the structure and fusion capability of the spike protein expressed by SARS-CoV. The cell-based fusion assay revealed that fusion of spike protein and ACE2-receptor expressing cells was strongly dependent on low pH and on proteolytic cleavage of the S-protein into S1 and S2 subunit. Additionally fusion could be significantly increased by lowering of the pH. The theoretical part of the thesis allowed the identification of the putative fusion peptide, which showed main characteristics of internal fusion peptides. It allows the heptad regions of the spike protein to assemble in the six-helix bundle structure (6HB). This structure is of great importance to initiate the approximation of viral and cellular membrane and thus to induce fusion.
|
84 |
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 LichtintensitätenGrotjohann, Tim 18 April 2012 (has links)
No description available.
|
85 |
Laterale Organisation von Shiga Toxin gebunden an Gb3-haltige Modellmembranen / Lateral Organisation of Shiga Toxin Bound to Model Membranes Containing Gb3Windschiegl, Barbara 23 January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
|
86 |
Stabilität und laterale Mobilität von porenüberspannenden Membranen auf porösen Siliziumsubstraten / Stability and lateral mobility of pore-suspending membranes on porous silicon substratesWeiskopf, Daniela 30 April 2009 (has links)
No description available.
|
87 |
Quantitation Strategies in Optically Sectioning Fluorescence Microscopy / Quantifizierungsstrategien in der optisch schnittbildenden FluoreszenzmikroskopieWeigel, Arwed 15 January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
|
88 |
Heat-induced changes in the material properties of cytoplasmEßlinger, Anne Hilke 26 June 2023 (has links)
Organisms are frequently exposed to fluctuating environmental conditions and might consequently experience stress. Environmental stress can damage cellular components, which can threaten especially single-celled organisms, such as yeast, as they cannot escape. To survive, cells mount protective stress responses, which serve to preserve cellular components and architecture. Recent findings in yeast show that the stress response upon energy depletion stress involves a gelation of the cytoplasm due to macromolecular protein assembly, characterized by drastic changes in cytoplasmic material properties. Remarkably, the stress-induced cytoplasmic gelation is protective, raising the question whether this could be a common strategy of cells to cope with severe stress. I hypothesized that protein aggregation induced by another common stress, severe heat shock, might cause a similar cytoplasmic gelation in yeast. Furthermore, I hypothesized that the reversibility of cytoplasmic gelation is provided by molecular chaperones, which are known regulators of protein aggregation. In this thesis, I therefore aimed to characterize the changes in the material properties of the cytoplasm upon severe heat shock as well as their underlying causes and how molecular chaperones affect these changes.
To characterize heat-induced changes in the material properties of the cytoplasm, I monitored Schizosaccharomyces pombe cells during recovery from severe heat shock using a combination of cell mechanical assays, time-lapse microscopy and single-particle tracking. I found that the cells entered a prolonged growth arrested state upon stress, which coincided with significant cell stiffening and a long-range motion arrest of lipid droplets in the cytoplasm, while smaller cytoplasmic nanoparticles remained mostly mobile. At the same time, a significant fraction of proteins aggregated in the cytoplasm, forming insoluble inclusions such as heat shock granules. After stress cessation, the observed changes were reversed as stiffened cells softened and lipid droplets resumed long-range motion. Cell softening and lipid droplet motion recovery coincided with protein disaggregation. These processes could be delayed by impairing protein disaggregation through genetic perturbation of the molecular chaperone Hsp104, which functions as a protein disaggregase. In contrast, no influence on protein disaggregation or heat-induced cytoplasmic material property changes was detected for the small heat shock protein Hsp16. These results suggest that the cytoplasm gels upon severe heat shock due to protein aggregation and is refluidized during recovery with the help of Hsp104. Remarkably, cells resumed growth only after refluidization of the cytoplasm, suggesting that reversible cytoplasmic gelation may contribute to regulation of the heat-induced growth arrest. In addition, cytoplasmic gelation could potentially preserve cellular architecture during heat shock. Overall, the results from my thesis work indicate that reversible cytoplasmic gelation due to macromolecular protein assembly may be a universal cellular response to severe stress which is associated with a stress-protective growth arrest. A likely stress-specific part of this response is the chaperone-dependent refluidization of the cytoplasm, which might explain the prolonged growth arrest seen upon severe heat shock as compared to other stresses and might allow more time for the repair of heat-induced damage.:Abstract
Zusammenfassung
Table of contents
Figure index
List of abbreviations
1 Introduction
1.1 Heat shock affects cellular function and fitness
1.1.1 Cells respond to stress in phases
1.1.2 Heat shock threatens cellular homeostasis and structural integrity
1.1.3 Stress severity determines detrimental effects of heat shock
1.1.4 Heat stress causes protein aggregation
1.1.5 Heat shock granules are functional aggregates in yeast
1.2 The heat shock response protects cellular fitness
1.2.1 Cells change transcription to adapt to stress
1.2.2 Molecular chaperones are important in stress protection
1.2.3 Hsp104 is a protein disaggregase chaperone
1.2.4 Small heat shock proteins modulate protein aggregation
1.2.5 Stress severity determines modules of the heat shock response
1.3 Cytoplasmic material properties change during stress
1.3.1 Cells homeostatically adapt cytoplasmic material properties during stress
1.3.2 The cytoplasm is viscoelastic
1.3.3 Is the cytoplasm a gel?
1.3.4 Stress can induce cytoplasmic gelation
1.4 Research aims
2 Materials and Methods
2.1 S. pombe strains and growth conditions
2.1.1 Growth conditions
2.1.2 Construction of S. pombe strains
2.1.3 S. pombe transformation
2.1.4 S. pombe colony PCR
2.1.5 S. pombe strains used in this thesis
2.2 Plasmids and cloning
2.2.1 Plasmids used in this thesis
2.2.2 Construction of plasmid for fluorescent GEM nanoparticle expression
2.2.3 E. coli transformation
2.2.4 Plasmid purification from E. coli
2.3 S. pombe stress treatments
2.3.1 Heat shock treatment
2.3.2 Osmoadaptation
2.4 Cell biological methods
2.4.1 Viability assay
2.4.2 Growth assay
2.5 Cell bulk mechanical assays
2.5.1 Spheroplasting assay
2.5.2 Atomic force microscopy
2.5.3 Real-time deformability cytometry
2.5.4 RT-DC sample preparation
2.5.5 RT-DC setup and measurements
2.5.6 RT-DC data evaluation
2.6 Microscopy
2.6.1 Microscopy of GEM particles
2.6.2 Fluorescence microscopy of endogenously labeled Pabp-mCherry
2.6.3 Microscopy of µNS particles
2.7 Image analysis
2.7.1 Image analysis of Pabp-mCherry in vivo fluorescence microscopy
2.7.2 Differenced brightfield image analysis
2.7.3 Kymographs
2.8 Single-particle tracking analysis
2.8.1 Particle tracking
2.8.2 Mean squared displacement analysis
2.9 Optical diffraction tomography (ODT)
2.9.1 ODT sample preparation
2.9.2 ODT optical setup and measurements
2.9.3 ODT tomogram reconstruction and quantitative analysis
2.10 Lysis and sedimentation assay
2.10.1 Lysis buffer
2.10.2 S. pombe heat shock treatment and lysis
2.10.3 Sedimentation assay
2.10.4 Protein concentration measurement
2.10.5 SDS-PAGE
2.10.6 Coomassie staining
2.10.7 Western Blot
3 Results
3.1 Physical and chemical conditions affect heat shock survival and heat-induced growth arrest of S. pombe
3.1.1 S. pombe arrests growth during severe heat shock
3.1.2 Heat-induced growth arrest is dose-responsive
3.1.3 Heat-induced growth arrest depends on experimental conditions
3.1.4 Buffer pH and energy source have a strong impact on heat shock survival
3.1.5 Osmoadaptation protects cells during heat shock
3.2 Severe heat shock induces reversible cellular stiffening
3.2.1 Cellular rounding upon cell wall removal is delayed after heat shock
3.2.2 Elastic modulus of S. pombe cells is increased after heat shock
3.2.3 Recovery from heat-induced growth arrest is preceded by cell softening
3.3 Long-range particle dynamics in cytoplasm are abolished after heat shock
3.3.1 Small particle dynamics are largely independent of heat shock treatment
3.3.2 Lipid droplets are confined in space after heat shock
3.4 Cytoplasmic crowding increases during heat shock
3.5 Heat shock induces reversible protein aggregation
3.5.1 Insoluble protein fraction is increased after heat shock
3.5.2 Heat shock granules form reversibly during heat shock
3.5.3 HSG formation and dissolution are correlated with changes in cytoplasmic long-range dynamics
3.6 Molecular chaperones modulate cytoplasmic material property changes during heat stress recovery
3.6.1 Hsp104 but not Hsp16 is required for disaggregation of heat shock granules
3.6.2 Hsp104 but not Hsp16 is required for recovery from heat-induced growth arrest
3.6.3 Hsp104 but not Hsp16 is required for recovery of cytoplasmic long-range dynamics
3.6.4 Hsp104 but not Hsp16 is required for rapid reversal of cellular stiffening which coincides with growth recovery
4 Discussion
4.1 Summary and model
4.2 Which mechanism underlies cell stiffening upon heat shock?
4.2.1 Heat-induced protein aggregation might cause cell stiffening
4.2.2 Heat-induced protein aggregation might lead to cytoplasmic gelation
4.2.3 Many factors could contribute to protein aggregation and cytoplasmic gelation
4.3 The heat-induced growth arrest state is associated with reversible cytoplasmic gelation
4.3.1 Cytoplasmic material property changes mark the severe heat-induced growth arrest state
4.3.2 Is cytoplasmic gelation a common response to severe stress?
4.4 What are the biological consequences of cytoplasmic gelation?
4.4.1 Cytoplasmic gelation might obstruct processes that require motion of large structures
4.4.2 Is cytoplasmic gelation upon heat shock protective?
4.5 Heat shock recovery involves the chaperone-mediated refluidization of the cytoplasm
4.5.1 Cytoplasmic refluidization is required for growth recovery
4.5.2 Stress tolerance is marked by enhanced reversibility of cytoplasmic gelation
4.5.3 The protein disaggregase chaperone Hsp104 regulates the reversal of heat-induced cytoplasmic material property changes
4.6 Conclusion
References
Acknowledgements
Publications and Contributions
5 Erklärung entsprechend §5.5 der Promotionsordnung
|
89 |
Characterization of heterogeneous diffusion in confined soft matterTäuber, Daniela 20 October 2011 (has links)
A new method, probability distribution of diffusivities (time scaled square displacements between succeeding video frames), was developed to analyze single molecule tracking (SMT) experiments. This method was then applied to SMT experiments on ultrathin liquid tetrakis(2-ethylhexoxy)silane (TEHOS) films on Si wafer with 100 nm thermally grown oxide, and on thin semectic liquid crystal films. Spatial maps of diffusivities from SMT experiments on 220 nm thick semectic liquid crystal films reveal structure related dynamics. The SMT experiments on ultrathin TEHOS films were complemented by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS). The observed strongly heterogeneous single molecule dynamics within those films can be explained by a three-layer model consisting of (i) dye molecules adsorbed to the substrate, (ii) slowly diffusing molecules in the laterally heterogeneous near-surface region of 1 - 2 molecular diameters, and (iii) freely diffusing dye molecules in the upper region of the film. FCS and SMT experiments reveal a strong influence of substrate heterogeneity on SM dynamics. Thereby chemisorption to substrate surface silanols plays an important role. Vertical mean first passage times (mfpt) in those films are below 1 µs. This appears as fast component in FCS autocorrelation curves, which further contain a contribution from lateral diffusion and from adsorption events. Therefore, the FCS curves are approximated by a tri-component function, which contains an exponential term related to the mfpt, the correlation function for translational diffusion and a stretched exponential term for the broad distribution of adsorption events. Lateral diffusion coefficients obtained by FCS on 10 nm thick TEHOS films, thereby, are effective diffusion coefficients from dye transients in the focal area. They strongly depend on the substrate heterogeneity. Variation of the frame times for the acquisition of SMT experiments in steps of 20 ms from 20 ms to 200 ms revealed a strong dependence of the corresponding probability distributions of diffusivities on time, in particular in the range between 20 ms and 100 ms. This points to average dwell times of the dye molecules in at least one type of the heterogeneous regions (e.g. on and above silanol clusters) in the range of few tens of milliseconds.
Furthermore, time series of SM spectra from Nile Red in 25 nm thick poly-n-alkyl-methacrylate (PnAMA) films were studied. In analogy to translational diffusion, spectral diffusion (shifts in energetic positions of SM spectra) can be studied by probability distributions of spectral diffusivities, i.e. time scaled square energetic displacements. Simulations were run and analyzed to study contributions from noise and fitting uncertainty to spectral diffusion. Furthermore the effect of spectral jumps during acquisition of a SM spectrum was investigated. Probability distributions of spectral diffusivites of Nile Red probing vitreous PnAMA films reveal a two-level system. In contrast, such probability distributions obtained from Nile Red within a 25 nm thick poly-n-butylmethacrylate film around glass transition and in the melt state, display larger spectral jumps. Moreover, for longer alkyl side chains a solvent shift to higher energies is observed, which supports the idea of nanophase separation within those polymers.
|
90 |
Parallel distributed-memory particle methods for acquisition-rate segmentation and uncertainty quantifications of large fluorescence microscopy imagesAfshar, Yaser 08 November 2016 (has links) (PDF)
Modern fluorescence microscopy modalities, such as light-sheet microscopy, are capable of acquiring large three-dimensional images at high data rate. This creates a bottleneck in computational processing and analysis of the acquired images, as the rate of acquisition outpaces the speed of processing. Moreover, images can be so large that they do not fit the main memory of a single computer. Another issue is the information loss during image acquisition due to limitations of the optical imaging systems. Analysis of the acquired images may, therefore, find multiple solutions (or no solution) due to imaging noise, blurring, and other uncertainties introduced during image acquisition.
In this thesis, we address the computational processing time and memory issues by developing a distributed parallel algorithm for segmentation of large fluorescence-microscopy images. The method is based on the versatile Discrete Region Competition (Cardinale et al., 2012) algorithm, which has previously proven useful in microscopy image segmentation. The present distributed implementation decomposes the input image into smaller sub-images that are distributed across multiple computers. Using network communication, the computers orchestrate the collective solving of the global segmentation problem. This not only enables segmentation of large images (we test images of up to 10^10 pixels) but also accelerates segmentation to match the time scale of image acquisition. Such acquisition-rate image segmentation is a prerequisite for the smart microscopes of the future and enables online data inspection and interactive experiments.
Second, we estimate the segmentation uncertainty on large images that do not fit the main memory of a single computer. We there- fore develop a distributed parallel algorithm for efficient Markov- chain Monte Carlo Discrete Region Sampling (Cardinale, 2013). The parallel algorithm provides a measure of segmentation uncertainty in a statistically unbiased way. It approximates the posterior probability densities over the high-dimensional space of segmentations around the previously found segmentation. / Moderne Fluoreszenzmikroskopie, wie zum Beispiel Lichtblattmikroskopie, erlauben die Aufnahme hochaufgelöster, 3-dimensionaler Bilder. Dies führt zu einen Engpass bei der Bearbeitung und Analyse der aufgenommenen Bilder, da die Aufnahmerate die Datenverarbeitungsrate übersteigt. Zusätzlich können diese Bilder so groß sein, dass sie die Speicherkapazität eines einzelnen Computers überschreiten. Hinzu kommt der aus Limitierungen des optischen Abbildungssystems resultierende Informationsverlust während der Bildaufnahme. Bildrauschen, Unschärfe und andere Messunsicherheiten können dazu führen, dass Analysealgorithmen möglicherweise mehrere oder keine Lösung für Bildverarbeitungsaufgaben finden.
Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit entwickeln wir einen verteilten, parallelen Algorithmus für die Segmentierung von speicherintensiven Fluoreszenzmikroskopie-Bildern. Diese Methode basiert auf dem vielseitigen "Discrete Region Competition" Algorithmus (Cardinale et al., 2012), der sich bereits in anderen Anwendungen als nützlich für die Segmentierung von Mikroskopie-Bildern erwiesen hat. Das hier präsentierte Verfahren unterteilt das Eingangsbild in kleinere Unterbilder, welche auf die Speicher mehrerer Computer verteilt werden. Die Koordinierung des globalen Segmentierungsproblems wird durch die Benutzung von Netzwerkkommunikation erreicht. Dies erlaubt die Segmentierung von sehr großen Bildern, wobei wir die Anwendung des Algorithmus auf Bildern mit bis zu 10^10 Pixeln demonstrieren. Zusätzlich wird die Segmentierungsgeschwindigkeit erhöht und damit vergleichbar mit der Aufnahmerate des Mikroskops. Dies ist eine Grundvoraussetzung für die intelligenten Mikroskope der Zukunft, und es erlaubt die Online-Betrachtung der aufgenommenen Daten, sowie interaktive Experimente.
Wir bestimmen die Unsicherheit des Segmentierungsalgorithmus bei der Anwendung auf Bilder, deren Größe den Speicher eines einzelnen Computers übersteigen. Dazu entwickeln wir einen verteilten, parallelen Algorithmus für effizientes Markov-chain Monte Carlo "Discrete Region Sampling" (Cardinale, 2013). Dieser Algorithmus quantifiziert die Segmentierungsunsicherheit statistisch erwartungstreu. Dazu wird die A-posteriori-Wahrscheinlichkeitsdichte über den hochdimensionalen Raum der Segmentierungen in der Umgebung der zuvor gefundenen Segmentierung approximiert.
|
Page generated in 0.064 seconds