NEWS: Bio-optics breakthroughs: Highlights of medical and bioscience research at Frontiers in Optics 2009
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2009-09/osoa-bbh092909.php
Contact: Angela Stark
astark@osa.org
202-416-1443
Optical Society of America
Research to be presented Oct. 11-15 in San Jose, Calif.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 29—From scopes that help premature babies breathe to
techniques for imaging live neurons and beating hearts as they develop, the
latest optical and laser technology being deployed in medicine and the
biosciences will be on display at the Optical Society's (OSA) Annual Meeting,
Frontiers in Optics (FiO), which takes place Oct. 11-15 at the Fairmont San
Jose Hotel and the Sainte Claire Hotel in San Jose, Calif.
Information on free registration for reporters is contained at the end of
this release. Bio-optics research highlights of the meeting include:
- Live Imaging of a Developing Heart
- New Scope to Help Premature Babies Breathe Easier
- Microfine Surgery with Powerful Laser Pulses
- Digital Camera Sees a Sharper Mind
- Following Single Molecules in Live Neurons
- Watching Proteins Fold
LIVE IMAGING OF A DEVELOPING HEART
Approximately one of every 100 babies born in the United States each year
comes into the world with a heart defect. Though there is a long history of
understanding cardiovascular development and diseases, says Kirill Larin of the
University of Houston, very little is known about the dynamics of the normal
and abnormal embryonic heart.
Half a century ago, Richard Feynman said that one of the easiest ways to
understand a fundamental biological process is to "just look at the
thing," and for a highly complicated process like embryonic heart
development and dynamics, he may be right. Being able to watch a young heart
begin to beat and form chambers would show scientists a lot -- perhaps even
revealing the developmental causes of heart abnormalities and other birth
defects. But looking at a developing embryo in its womb is easier said than
done. Fluorescence microscopes lack the ability to penetrate the skin deeply
enough to image an embryo. Medical ultrasound devices can penetrate fully, but
they lack the resolution necessary to reveal the details of development.
Now Larin and colleagues at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston have
shown that they can image live mouse embryos cultured outside of the uterus at
different stages of development. Using a technique called optical coherence
tomography (OCT), they are able to visualize early cardio dynamics and perform
blood flow measurements, even from individual cells. OCT works by beaming
infrared light on the embryonic tissues and then gating the back-reflected
photons from different depths inside the tissues using low-coherence
interferometry. The technique is similar to ultrasound imaging, but produces
higher resolution images using optical frequencies. The researchers have
demonstrated that they can image the heart in its earliest stages, as it first
starts to beat and forms chambers. Their hope is to now use this tool to compare
how hearts develop in genetically manipulated mice carrying mutations analogous
to those that lead to birth defects in people. (Paper FthV2, "Early
Mammalian Embryonic Imaging at Different Developmental Stages with Optical
Coherence Tomography" is at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 15).
NEW SCOPE TO HELP PREMATURE BABIES BREATHE EASIER
Babies born prematurely often find it difficult to breathe on their own.
They may require intubation, the insertion of a tube through the nose or mouth
into the still-developing lungs to move air in and out. Intubation in adults
has a reasonable success rate -- upwards of 80 or 90 percent -- but only about
half of first attempts to insert the tube succeed in low-birth-weight babies.
"The size is different and the anatomy is different in infants,"
says Katherine Baker of the University of California, San Diego.
Baker is working with pediatricians at the university's medical center to
create a new piece of equipment suitable for infants, a customized
laryngoscope. Its centimeter-wide acrylic tip is tilted to better guide the
breathing tube, a light-emitting diode (LED) illuminates the baby's airway and
a camera at the end helps medical professionals to maneuver the tube and to
teach others how to do the procedure.
The group has successfully tested a prototype on a mannequin and is working
to create a second version suitable for testing in clinical trials. (Paper
FthP3, "Design and Prototype Fabrication of a Neonatal Video
Laryngoscope" is at 2:15 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 15).
MICROFINE SURGERY WITH POWERFUL LASER PULSES
Targeting living cells with laser pulses has been a powerful technique in
biology for a number of years. Lasers can punch holes in cell membranes or cut
one part of a cell off from another, revealing how the various pieces of a cell
function. In recent years, neurobiologists have begun embracing precise laser
nanosurgery as a way of revealing the function of individual neurons. Short but
powerful laser pulses can deposit considerable energy onto a tiny spot, cleanly
cutting a nerve cell without cooking the surrounding tissue. By severing the
branches of nerve fibers in creatures like worms or mice, scientists can
determine what parts of the body those nerves control.
At the Frontiers in Optics conference, Eric Mazur of Harvard University will
describe how laser nanosurgery works, based on his own studies of the worm-like
nematode C. elegans. One nematode in particular has a genetic mutation that
renders it unable to coordinate its movement. It can wiggle, but it cannot
easily move forward or backward. Mazur and his colleagues have shown that they
can restore normal motion to this creature by cutting a single neuron. (Paper
FWA1, "Nanosurgery with Femtosecond Lasers" is at 8 a.m. Wednesday,
Oct. 12).
DIGITAL CAMERA SEES A SHARPER MIND
Try as you might, you can never hold perfectly still -- your body will
twitch and jerk with movements nearly invisible to the eye. And if you're a
patient in a hospital or the subject of a research study, this squirming will
blur the images created by scanning devices like MRI machines, limiting their
ability to spot minute details.
Chester Wildey of the University of Texas, Dallas, is working on a way to
detect and compensate for these slight movements using a modified digital
camera. The camera tracks a pair of glasses worn by the subject and records
minute movements of the head.
"Using a regular 640 by 480 camera, we can detect movement down to a
micron," says Wildey. "You can't see movement that small with your
eye." Image processing software developed by his group crunches this data
in real time, allowing scanners to be adjusted and achieve better resolutions.
The technology has been used by researchers in Texas looking for evidence in
the brain for Gulf War syndrome, a controversial physical illness thought to be
connected to service in the Gulf War. He believes that the technology could
help researchers looking for other subtle changes in the brain -- such as those
studying the neurological basis of attention deficit disorder.
The camera is also being adapted to measure a person's heartbeat from a
distance by recording slight movements in tabs attached to the pulsing skin.
Wildey hopes that this may lead to a way to detect atherosclerosis by comparing
heartbeats in different parts of the body. (Paper FWR3, "Head tracking for
Real-Time Motion Correction in the MRI Environment Using a Single Camera"
is at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, October 14; Paper JWC9, "Real Time Optical
Vibrocardiography Using Image Processing" is at noon on Wednesday, October
12).
FOLLOWING SINGLE MOLECULES IN LIVE NEURONS
Peripheral nerves are the organic wires that connect the command centers in
the brain to the muscles and other tissues they control. Understanding how
these nerves function is of critical importance because of their central role
in many human diseases. Now a group of researchers at Stanford University has
designed a way to observe one critical aspect of peripheral nerve function --
the transport of essential proteins and other materials from one end of a nerve
fiber to another.
Because they can snake several feet from the spinal cord to the extremities,
peripheral nerves are often quite long -- sometimes 100,000 times longer than
other cells in the body. The transportation of materials along this entire
length is an extremely long and complicated process that can take days or even
weeks. Studying this process has always been a complicated proposition, but
Bianxiao Cui and her Stanford colleagues have demonstrated a new way of
observing this transport by tagging single molecules, called nerve growth
factors, with "quantum dots" that can be followed with a powerful
microscope as they move along live neurons.
The researchers' technique is analogous to looking at a dark highway from
the window of an airplane. The dark, invisible lanes of roads are microtubules,
the skeleton of the cell. The nerve growth factor molecules ride in the cars
that are illuminated by their quantum dot headlights. One thing Cui and her
colleagues have observed, which has never been seen before, is that packages in
transport can jump from one microtubule to another as they move along -- like
cars switching lanes as they roll down the highway. They also discovered that
the majority of those cars are single passenger; they only contain a single
nerve growth factor molecule.
Scientists have known for a long time that these proteins are essential,
since they help the nerve cells survive by regulating gene expression. But Cui
and her colleagues showed that even a single molecule of nerve growth factor is
enough to trigger the transport process and sustain signaling during axonal
transport to the cell body. (Paper LSThB3, "Single Molecule Imaging of
Axonal Transport in Live Neurons" is at 9 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 15).
WATCHING PROTEINS FOLD
One of the most important biological actions is the folding and unfolding of
protein molecules. But getting hold of single protein molecules is difficult,
and monitoring their gymnastic gyrations is even more so. Scientists at Harvard
University have produced new video-based "optical tweezers"
techniques for doing just this, enabling ultra-precise measurements to be made
in a way that is simple and effective. The current U.S. secretary of energy,
Steven Chu, won a Nobel Prize for his contribution toward controlling atoms
with laser beams inside an enclosed trap; he later pioneered the use of laser
beams for actually holding tiny objects -- even biological molecules -- in
place. The Harvard device is among the latest and most versatile use of this
optical tweezers approach.
Wesley Wong of the Rowland Institute at Harvard and his colleagues have
developed a unique optical tweezers system that uses a combination of
interference imaging, light modulation and custom software algorithms to
achieve the necessary resolution and stability to watch proteins fold. This
system, which employs already-existing optical technology components, utilizes
3-D video tracking to measure the lengths of short molecular tethers with
angstrom resolution (less than 1 billionth of a meter) and active feedback
control for a force stability of femtoNewtons (10^-15 Newtons). Fluctuations
can be glimpsed at rates faster than 100,000 frames per second -- all with
inexpensive video-imaging. The act of protein folding is quantified by
measuring the end-to-end distance of a single molecule while the strength of
the tweezers' grip is varied.
The Wong group uses optical tweezers to study the behavior of single
molecules under force in order to reveal the nanoscopic workings of biological
systems. Together with their collaborators, they have used this approach to
expose the molecular feedback mechanism behind the regulation of blood clotting
and to determine the dynamic mechanical properties of spectrin, a structural
molecule largely responsible for the amazing material properties of red blood
cells. (Paper FWS1, High-Resolution, High-Stability, "High-Frequency
Optical Tweezers Method with a Simple Video Camera" is at 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 14).
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ABOUT THE MEETING
FiO 2009 is OSA's 93rd Annual Meeting and is being held together with Laser
Science XXV, the annual meeting of the American Physical Society (APS) Division
of Laser Science (DLS). The two meetings unite the OSA and APS communities for
five days of quality, cutting-edge presentations, fascinating invited speakers
and a variety of special events spanning a broad range of topics in physics,
biology and chemistry. The FiO 2009 conference will also offer a number of
Short Courses designed to increase participants' knowledge of a specific
subject while offering the experience of insightful teachers. An exhibit floor
featuring leading optics companies will further enhance the meeting.
Useful Links:
-- Meeting home page: http://www.frontiersinoptics.com/
-- Conference program: http://www.frontiersinoptics.com/ConferenceProgram/default.aspx
-- Searchable abstracts: http://files.abstractsonline.com/SUPT/36/2421/2009FiOPP.html
EDITOR'S NOTE: A Press Room for credentialed press and analysts will be
located in the Fairmont Hotel, Sunday through Thursday. Those interested in
obtaining a press badge for FiO should contact OSA's Angela Stark, astark@osa.org or 202.416.1443.
About OSA
Uniting more than 106,000 professionals from 134 countries, the Optical
Society (OSA) brings together the global optics community through its programs
and initiatives. Since 1916 OSA has worked to advance the common interests of
the field, providing educational resources to the scientists, engineers and
business leaders who work in the field by promoting the science of light and
the advanced technologies made possible by optics and photonics. OSA
publications, events, technical groups and programs foster optics knowledge and
scientific collaboration among all those with an interest in optics and
photonics. For more information, visit: www.osa.org.
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