Software tools for single-cell tracking and quantification of cellular and molecular properties

2016 ◽  
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Bernhard Schauberger ◽  
Philipp S Hoppe ◽  
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Liset M. de la Prida

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Methods ◽  
2018 ◽  
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Nanoscale ◽  
2013 ◽  
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Greg Sitton ◽  
Friedrich Srienc

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2015 ◽  
Vol 26 (22) ◽  
pp. 3940-3945 ◽  
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Laura Lande-Diner ◽  
Jacob Stewart-Ornstein ◽  
Charles J. Weitz ◽  
Galit Lahav

Tracking molecular dynamics in single cells in vivo is instrumental to understanding how cells act and interact in tissues. Current tissue imaging approaches focus on short-term observation and typically nonendogenous or implanted samples. Here we develop an experimental and computational setup that allows for single-cell tracking of a transcriptional reporter over a period of >1 wk in the context of an intact tissue. We focus on the peripheral circadian clock as a model system and measure the circadian signaling of hundreds of cells from two tissues. The circadian clock is an autonomous oscillator whose behavior is well described in isolated cells, but in situ analysis of circadian signaling in single cells of peripheral tissues is as-yet uncharacterized. Our approach allowed us to investigate the oscillatory properties of individual clocks, determine how these properties are maintained among different cells, and assess how they compare to the population rhythm. These experiments, using a wide-field microscope, a previously generated reporter mouse, and custom software to track cells over days, suggest how many signaling pathways might be quantitatively characterized in explant models.


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