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High speed or high resolution imaging

Prairie Application References

  1. Nature 2009, January 29; 457(7229): 603–607.
    Prominin1 marks intestinal stem cells that are susceptible to neoplastic transformation
    Liqin Zhu, Paul Gibson, D. Spencer Currle, Yiai Tong, Robert J. Richardson, Ildar T. Bayazitov, Helen Poppleton, Stanislav Zakharenko, David W. Ellison and Richard J. Gilbertson
  2. NATURE METHODS, VOL.6 NO.7, July 2009.
    In vivo fluorescence with high resolution microlenses
    Robert P J Barretto, Bernhard Messerschmidt and Mark J Schnitzer.
  3. J. Neurosci. (2009), 29: 8565-8577
    Endogenous Nitric Oxide Is a Key Promoting Factor for Initiation of Seizure-LikeEvents in Hippocampal and Entorhinal Cortex Slices
    Richard Kovács, Alexander Rabanus, Jakub Otáhal, Andreas Patzak, Julianna Kardos, Klaus Albus, Uwe Heinemann and Oliver Kann.
  4. Nature Neuroscience 12, 553 - 558 (2009).
    Localization of inner hair cell mechanotransducer channels using high-speed calcium imaging
    Maryline Beurg, Robert Fettiplace, Jong-Hoon Nam & Anthony J Ricci.
  5. Nature 456, 745-749 (11 December 2008).
    Brain metabolism dictates the polarity of astrocyte control over arterioles
    Grant R. J. Gordon, Hyun B. Choi, Ravi L. Rungta, Graham C. R. Ellis-Davies & Brian A. MacVicar.
  6. The Journal of Neuroscience (2008), 28(45):11603-11614;
    Differential Excitability and Modulation of Striatal Medium Spiny Neuron Dendrites
    Michelle Day, David Wokosin, Joshua L. Plotkin, Xinyoung Tian, and D. James Surmeier
  7. Nature, vol. 454|7 August 2008.
    Minimally invasive high-speed imaging of sarcomere contractile dynamics in mice and humans
    Michael E. Llewellyn, Robert P. J. Barretto, Scott L. Delp & Mark J. Schnitzer
  8. Nature Methods 5, 197–202 (2008).
    High-speed, low-photodamage nonlinear imaging using passive pulse splitters
    Na Ji , Jeffrey C Magee and Eric Betzig.
  9. The Journal of Neuroscience (2008), 28(50):13457-13466
    Spine Neck Plasticity Controls Postsynaptic Calcium Signals through Electrical Compartmentalization
    Åsa Grunditz, Niklaus Holbro, Lei Tian, Yi Zuo, and Thomas G. Oertner
  10. The Journal of Neuroscience, September 3, 2008, 28(36):8955-8967.
    Synaptic and Cellular Properties of the Feedforward Inhibitory Circuit within the Input Layer of the Cerebellar Cortex
    Roby T. Kanichay and R. Angus Silver.
  11. NeuroImage, volume 34, Issue 3 (2007), Pages 859-869.
    In vivo calcium imaging from genetically specified target cells in mouse cerebellum
    Javier Díez-Garcíaa, Walther Akemanna and Thomas Knöpfel.
  12. The Journal of Neuroscience (2007), 27(40):10674-10684;
    Enhanced Astrocytic Ca2+ Signals Contribute to Neuronal Excitotoxicity after Status Epilepticus
    Shinghua Ding, Tommaso Fellin, Yingzi Zhu, So-Young Lee, Yves P. Auberson, David F. Meaney, Douglas A. Coulter, Giorgio Carmignoto and Philip G. Haydon
  13. Nature Methods, 2006, 3 (1):35-40.
    The nitrodibenzofuran chromophore: a new caging group for ultra-efficient photolysis in living cells.
    Momotake A, Lindegger N, Niggli E, Barsotti RJ, Ellis-Davies GC.

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DATA SPOTLIGHT

C. elegans embryo expressing B-tubulin GFP
Image courtesy of Koen Verbrugghe and Chris Malone, Laboratory of Molecular Biology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI

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Time-lapse recordings of tubulin GFP C. elegans embryos during mitosis.
One image was acquired every second with a 100x Super Fluor lens using the SFC.
Image courtesy of Kevin Eliceiri and Koen Verbrugghe, LOCI, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI.

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SFC

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