high resolution microscopy
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2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (51) ◽  
pp. e2114167118
Author(s):  
Zongrui Pei ◽  
Siyuan Zhang ◽  
Yinkai Lei ◽  
Fan Zhang ◽  
Mingwei Chen

Mechanical properties are fundamental to structural materials, where dislocations play a decisive role in describing their mechanical behavior. Although the high-yield stresses of multiprincipal element alloys (MPEAs) have received extensive attention in the last decade, the relation between their mechanistic origins remains elusive. Our multiscale study of density functional theory, atomistic simulations, and high-resolution microscopy shows that the excellent mechanical properties of MPEAs have diverse origins. The strengthening effects through Shockley partials and stacking faults can be decoupled in MPEAs, breaking the conventional wisdom that low stacking fault energies are coupled with wide partial dislocations. This study clarifies the mechanistic origins for the strengthening effects, laying the foundation for physics-informed predictive models for materials design.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yao L. Wang ◽  
Erik L. Jaklitsch ◽  
Noa W. F. Grooms ◽  
Leilani G. Schulting ◽  
Samuel H. Chung

Imaging, visual screens, and optical surgery are frequently applied to the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans at subcellular resolution for in vivo biological research. However, these approaches remain low-throughput and require significant manual effort. To improve throughput and enable automation in these techniques, we implement a novel cooling method to immobilize C. elegans directly on their cultivation plate. Previous studies cooled animals in microfluidics or flooded wells to 1-4 C. Counterintuitively, we find that cooling to 5-7 C immobilizes animals more effectively than lower temperatures. At 6 C, animal movement consists of bouts of submicron nose tip movement occurring at a sufficiently low magnitude and frequency to permit clear imaging. We demonstrate the ability to perform subcellular-resolution fluorescence imaging, including 64x magnification 3D image stacks and 2-min long timelapse recordings of the ASJ neuron without blurring from animal motion. We also observe no long-term side effects from cooling immobilization on animal lifespan or fecundity. We believe our cooling method enables high-throughput and high-resolution microscopy with no chemical or mechanical interventions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amilcar J. Perez ◽  
Jesus Bazan Villicana ◽  
Ho-Ching T. Tsui ◽  
Madeline L. Danforth ◽  
Mattia Benedet ◽  
...  

The bacterial FtsZ-ring initiates division by recruiting a large repertoire of proteins (the divisome; Z-ring) needed for septation and separation of cells. Although FtsZ is essential and its role as the main orchestrator of cell division is conserved in most eubacteria, the regulators of Z-ring presence and positioning are not universal. This study characterizes factors that regulate divisome presence and placement in the ovoid-shaped pathogen, Streptococcus pneumoniae (Spn), focusing on FtsZ, EzrA, SepF, ZapA, and ZapJ, which is reported here as a partner of ZapA. Epi-fluorescence microscopy (EFm) and high-resolution microscopy experiments showed that FtsZ and EzrA co-localize during the entire Spn cell cycle, whereas ZapA and ZapJ are late-arriving divisome proteins. Depletion and conditional mutants demonstrate that EzrA is essential in Spn and required for normal cell growth, size, shape homeostasis, and chromosome segregation. Moreover, EzrA(Spn) is required for midcell placement of FtsZ-rings and PG synthesis. Notably, overexpression of EzrA leads to the appearance of extra Z-rings in Spn. Together, these observations support a role for EzrA as a positive regulator of FtsZ-ring formation in Spn. Conversely, FtsZ is required for EzrA recruitment to equatorial rings and for the organization of PG synthesis. In contrast to EzrA depletion, which causes a bacteriostatic phenotype in Spn, depletion of FtsZ results in enlarged spherical cells that are subject to LytA-dependent autolysis. Co-immunoprecipitation and bacterial two-hybrid assays show that EzrA(Spn) is in complexes with FtsZ, Z-ring regulators (FtsA, SepF, ZapA, MapZ), division proteins (FtsK, StkP), and proteins that mediate peptidoglycan synthesis (GpsB, aPBP1a), consistent with a role for EzrA at the interface of cell division and PG synthesis. In contrast to the essentiality of FtsZ and EzrA, ZapA and SepF have accessory roles in regulating pneumococcal physiology. We further show that ZapA interacts with a non-ZapB homolog, named here as ZapJ, which is conserved in Streptococcus species. The absence of the accessory proteins, ZapA, ZapJ, and SepF, exacerbates growth defects when EzrA is depleted or MapZ is deleted. Taken together, these results provide new information about the spatially and temporally distinct proteins that regulate FtsZ-ring organization and cell division in Spn.


Author(s):  
Cathrine Rein Carlson ◽  
Jan M Aronsen ◽  
Anna Bergan-Dahl ◽  
Marie Christine Moutty ◽  
Marianne Lunde ◽  
...  

Background: The sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca 2+ -ATPase 2 (SERCA2) mediates a 2+ -reuptake into SR and thereby promotes cardiomyocyte relaxation, whereas the ryanodine receptor (RYR) mediates a 2+ -release from SR and triggers contraction. a 2+ /calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) regulates activities of SERCA2 through phosphorylation of phospholamban (PLN) and RYR through direct phosphorylation. However, the mechanisms for CaMKIIδ anchoring to SERCA2-PLN and RYR and its regulation by local a 2+ -signals remain elusive. The objective of this study was to investigate CaMKIIδ anchoring and regulation at SERCA2-PLN and RYR. Methods: A role for A-kinase anchoring protein 18δ (AKAP18δ) in CaMKIIδ anchoring and regulation was analyzed by bioinformatics, peptide arrays, cell-permeant peptide technology, immunoprecipitations, pull-downs, transfections, immunoblotting, proximity ligation, FRET-based CaMKII activity and ELISA-based assays, whole cell and SR-vesicle fluorescence imaging, high-resolution microscopy, adenovirus transduction, adeno-associated virus injection, structural modeling, surface plasmon resonance and alpha screen technology. Results: Our results show that AKAP18δ anchors and directly regulates CaMKIIδ activity at SERCA2-PLN and RYR, via two distinct AKAP18δ regions. An N-terminal region (AKAP18δ-N) inhibited CaMKIIδ through binding of a region homologous to natural CaMKII inhibitor peptide and Thr17-PLN region. AKAP18δ-N also bound CaM, introducing a second level of control. Conversely, AKAP18δ-C, which shares homology to neuronal CaMKIIα activator peptide (N2B-s), activated CaMKIIδ by lowering the apparent a 2+ -threshold for kinase activation and inducing CaM trapping. While AKAP18δ-C facilitated faster a 2+ -reuptake by SERCA2 and a 2+ -release through RYR, AKAP18δ-N had opposite effects. We propose a model where the two unique AKAP18δ regions fine-tune a 2+ -frequency-dependent activation of CaMKIIδ at SERCA2-PLN and RYR. Conclusions: AKAP18δ anchors and functionally regulates CaMKII activity at PLN-SERCA2 and RYR, indicating a crucial role of AKAP18δ in regulation of the heartbeat. To our knowledge this is the first protein shown to enhance CaMKII activity in heart and also the first AKAP reported to anchor a CaMKII isoform, defining AKAP18δ also as a CaM-KAP.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Renjie Wang ◽  
Aiwen Huang ◽  
Yan Wang ◽  
Pengxin Mei ◽  
He Zhu ◽  
...  

The spatial organization of the nucleus is a key determinant in all genome activities. However, the accurate measurement of the nuclear organization is still technically challenging. Here, the technology NucQuant we created previously was utilized to detect the variation of the nuclear organization, including the heterogeneity of the nuclear geometry, the change of the NPC distribution along different cell cycle stages during interphase, and the organization of the nucleolus. The results confirmed that not only the growth rate and the NPC distribution are influenced by the carbon source; the nuclear shape is also impacted by the carbon source. The nuclei lost their spherical geometry gradually when the cell was cultured from the most to a less favorable carbon source. We also discovered that the nucleolus prefers to locate at the nuclear periphery, which was called the “genes poor region,” especially when the cells entered quiescence. Furthermore, the distribution of the NPC along the different stages during the interphase was analyzed. We proposed that with the growth of the cell, the nucleus would grow from the surface of the NE flanking the nucleolus firstly.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (15) ◽  
pp. 7880
Author(s):  
Lauren K. Jabusch ◽  
Peter W. Kim ◽  
Dawn Chiniquy ◽  
Zhiying Zhao ◽  
Bing Wang ◽  
...  

Fabricated ecosystems (EcoFABs) offer an innovative approach to in situ examination of microbial establishment patterns around plant roots using nondestructive, high-resolution microscopy. Previously high-resolution imaging was challenging because the roots were not constrained to a fixed distance from the objective. Here, we describe a new ‘Imaging EcoFAB’ and the use of this device to image the entire root system of growing Brachypodium distachyon at high resolutions (20×, 40×) over a 3-week period. The device is capable of investigating root–microbe interactions of multimember communities. We examined nine strains of Pseudomonas simiae with different fluorescent constructs to B. distachyon and individual cells on root hairs were visible. Succession in the rhizosphere using two different strains of P. simiae was examined, where the second addition was shown to be able to establish in the root tissue. The device was suitable for imaging with different solid media at high magnification, allowing for the imaging of fungal establishment in the rhizosphere. Overall, the Imaging EcoFAB could improve our ability to investigate the spatiotemporal dynamics of the rhizosphere, including studies of fluorescently-tagged, multimember, synthetic communities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Mondeja ◽  
Odalys Valdes ◽  
Sonia Resik ◽  
Ananayla Vizcaino ◽  
Emilio Acosta ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 is the etiological agent of COVID-19. This virus has become one of the most dangerous in recent times with a very high rate of transmission. At present, several publications show the typical crown-shape of the novel coronavirus grown in cell cultures. However, an integral ultramicroscopy study done directly from clinical specimens has not been published. Methods Nasopharyngeal swabs were collected from 12 Cuban individuals, six asymptomatic and RT-PCR negative (negative control) and six others from a COVID-19 symptomatic and RT-PCR positive for SARS CoV-2. Samples were treated with an aldehyde solution and processed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), confocal microscopy (CM) and, atomic force microscopy. Improvement and segmentation of coronavirus images were performed by a novel mathematical image enhancement algorithm. Results The images of the negative control sample showed the characteristic healthy microvilli morphology at the apical region of the nasal epithelial cells. As expected, they do not display virus-like structures. The images of the positive sample showed characteristic coronavirus-like particles and evident destruction of microvilli. In some regions, virions budding through the cell membrane were observed. Microvilli destruction could explain the anosmia reported by some patients. Virus-particles emerging from the cell-surface with a variable size ranging from 80 to 400 nm were observed by SEM. Viral antigen was identified in the apical cells zone by CM. Conclusions The integral microscopy study showed that SARS-CoV-2 has a similar image to SARS-CoV. The application of several high-resolution microscopy techniques to nasopharyngeal samples awaits future use.


Polymer ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 124050
Author(s):  
Marcin K. Heljak ◽  
Ewa Kijeńska-Gawrońska ◽  
Adrian Chlanda ◽  
Maciej Łojkowski ◽  
Jakub Jaroszewicz ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Henricus T. S. Boschker ◽  
Perran L. M. Cook ◽  
Lubos Polerecky ◽  
Raghavendran Thiruvallur Eachambadi ◽  
Helena Lozano ◽  
...  

AbstractFilamentous cable bacteria display long-range electron transport, generating electrical currents over centimeter distances through a highly ordered network of fibers embedded in their cell envelope. The conductivity of these periplasmic wires is exceptionally high for a biological material, but their chemical structure and underlying electron transport mechanism remain unresolved. Here, we combine high-resolution microscopy, spectroscopy, and chemical imaging on individual cable bacterium filaments to demonstrate that the periplasmic wires consist of a conductive protein core surrounded by an insulating protein shell layer. The core proteins contain a sulfur-ligated nickel cofactor, and conductivity decreases when nickel is oxidized or selectively removed. The involvement of nickel as the active metal in biological conduction is remarkable, and suggests a hitherto unknown form of electron transport that enables efficient conduction in centimeter-long protein structures.


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