From 2010.igem.org
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- | = Microscope = | + | = Microscopy = |
- | == Experimental setup == | + | == Details on microscope == |
| A fluorescence microscope with motorized x, y and z control, a motorized shutter and a 60× lens is used with appropriate fluorescence filters for the fluorescence signals. Light-emitting diode arrays are installed as light sources for red light (660 nm) and far-red light (748 nm) pulses. | | A fluorescence microscope with motorized x, y and z control, a motorized shutter and a 60× lens is used with appropriate fluorescence filters for the fluorescence signals. Light-emitting diode arrays are installed as light sources for red light (660 nm) and far-red light (748 nm) pulses. |
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- | == Information Flow == | + | == Details on the Flow Channel == |
- | [[Image:MicroscopePipeline.jpg|thumb|400px|The imaging pipeline from the microscope to Matlab/Simulink]]
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- | The microscope is connected to a workstation using the core drivers and interfaces of μManager (see Stuurman et al. (2007) or [http://www.micro-manager.org]). To provide a mechanism to change the cell's input signal depending on its fluorescence signal, we developed the microscope software μPlateImager, which enables for parallel acquisition of images and the modification of light input signals. μPlateImager uses the Java interface of the μManager core to control the microscope and can be configured by a separate platform-independent visual user interface. Since the communication with the microscope already requires a significant amount of system resources, it was necessary to swap the image processing, cell detection, and controller part to a second workstation to increase the possible frame rate. μPlateImager can therefore be controlled over the network or the internet by a GUI (graphical user interface). This GUI uses the yet undocumented Java MATLAB Interface (JMI) to start up a Matlab (The MathWorks, Natick, MA) process based on the open source project matlabcontrol (see [http://code.google.com/p/matlabcontrol/]). It furthermore starts up a Simulink model and transfers the microscope control to several of the blocks of the Lemming Toolbox, a Simulink toolbox allowing for the block based interconnection of the main controller and image processing parts, like cell detection, tracking the visualization or the like.
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- | == Toolkit (Simulink) == | + | == Details on the red light/ far-red light diodes and the filters == |
- | [[Image:Simulink.jpg|thumb|400px|Graphical user interface with which the image analysis pipeline and the control algorithm can be defined]]A Matlab script is executed by μPlateImager, which transfers the control over the microscope and automatically starts the GUI based on Simulink. The GUI consists of several blocks representing the single steps of the image analysis and the control of the microscope. First, the microscope block triggers the microscope to make an image and sends this image to the cell detection block, which detects all cells in the current image and tracks them between the several frames. This information is send to the next block which selects the cell to be controlled. Furthermore, by comparing the change in the position of the E. lemming over several consecutive images, the direction of the E. lemming is estimated. This data together with the raw image is send to the display.<br clear="all">
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- | [[Image:Screen.jpg|thumb|400px|Output on the screen. The cone is visualizing the current direction of the selected E. coli.]]The direction of the cell is automatically compared to the direction it should go. This direction can be intuitively defined by the user using a joystick. The force feedback functionality of the joystick is used to give the user an intuitive feedback of the current direction of the E. lemming. If the difference between the actual direction of the E. lemming and the direction the user defined is too high, tumbling is automatically induced by a red light (660nm) pulse. Otherwise tumbling is supressed by a far red light (748nm). Alternatively the user can induce the pulses directly using the buttons of the joystick.
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- | If the cell is moving out of the image the microscope moves automatically such that the cell is always approximately in the center of the image.
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Revision as of 19:59, 14 October 2010
Microscopy
Details on microscope
A fluorescence microscope with motorized x, y and z control, a motorized shutter and a 60× lens is used with appropriate fluorescence filters for the fluorescence signals. Light-emitting diode arrays are installed as light sources for red light (660 nm) and far-red light (748 nm) pulses.
Details on the Flow Channel
Details on the red light/ far-red light diodes and the filters