In conventional imaging, lenses resolve a sharp image of the target onto the sensor by focusing just the light emitted by the target within the lens' "focal plane" (a volume in front of the lens determined by the width of its aperture and the wavelength of the light passing through it) while blurring light from everywhere else into background noise. One can think of this system as amplifying certain information (the light from the focal plane) while filtering out other information (the light from everywhere else) from the total input light.
In other words, the images formed by lenses are lossy by design. This isn't practically a problem at macroscales, but at microscales the focal plane becomes extremely thin (micron-scale), oftentimes 1/100th as thick as the sample being imaged. To image large cells, for instance, a microscopist might be forced to capture tens or hundreds of images of the sample from different focal lengths (a "z-stack"), then deconvolve them to generate an image in which most/all of the sample is in focus.
These new techniques are interesting because they fundamentally attempt to capture more of the "information" present in the incident light. The lens does not capture an "image" that can be directly visualized, but rather a more full representation of the wave-field of all the incident light. Generating a conventional image from the raw data requires sophisticated additional processing.
The Ozcan lab has published some really neat (and eminently DIYable) work in this area:
"Lensfree On-chip Tomographic Microscopy Employing Multi-angle Illumination and Pixel Super-resolution", Serhan O. Isikman, Waheb Bishara, and Aydogan Ozcan. J Vis Exp. 2012; (66): 4161. doi: 10.3791/4161. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3487288/
"Existing 3D optical imagers generally have relatively bulky and complex architectures, limiting the availability of these equipments to advanced laboratories, and impeding their integration with lab-on-a-chip platforms and microfluidic chips. To provide an alternative tomographic microscope, we recently developed lensfree optical tomography (LOT) as a high-throughput, compact and cost-effective optical tomography modality. 7 LOT discards the use of lenses and bulky optical components, and instead relies on multi-angle illumination and digital computation to achieve depth-resolved imaging of micro-objects over a large imaging volume. LOT can image biological specimen at a spatial resolution of <1 μm x <1 μm x <3 μm in the x, y and z dimensions, respectively, over a large imaging volume of 15-100 mm3, and can be particularly useful for lab-on-a-chip platforms."
Also see http://spie.org/newsroom/technical-articles-archive/3979-mul...
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Making synthetic compounds is usually harder, or rewuires more computional power I guess. If you want to produce a pore forming enzyme that kills bacteria by leakimg them out, where would you start? Probably taking a domain that is known to bind to an E. coli surface protein and a known pore (like a Colicin). Designing a pore yourself from scratch is hard I guess, where to start. There are countless possibilities, and some of them are effective. On the other hand, nature has shown that X,Y are effective
To see molecules sounds a lot like wanting to see atoms. Currently the people are doing things with scanning electron microscopes (and also scanning transmission electron microscopes) where you scan a surface and analyse the xrays that are emitted as a result of the electron beam impact. There are also people that look at the energy loss of electrons that bounced off (EELS).
Then there are environmental SEMs that can operate at high enough vacuum that cells can survive (so imaging can take place, then the cells returned to their normal growth chamber).
Then there is combination FIB +SEM serial block face sectioning... You end up with a 3D image dataset. In this technique an image is acquired, then the FIB is used like a machine-shop belt-sander to grind off (ablate) a layer, then another image is acquired, and the process repeats until the sample is gone through. This has to happen at cryo freezing temperatures, otherwise the molecules will move and the images will be blurred, not to mention the sequence of images in the serial block face operation.
And there's also cryo TEM tomography, where a cell or section/slice of a cell is in a frozen state and put into the TEM and an image is acquired. If the slice is too thick (which is the use-case for this technique) it will be blurry, but with math this can be unblurred into a 3D volume dataset. This is kind of like diffraction crystallography.
I reccomend going to your local biohackers space (like genspace nyc) growing your first colorful bacteria and talk about your ideas.
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Sounds easier than de-novo design. And you don't have to watch bacteria for that. You can test protein interactions with various methods, and if you take a very conserved protein (usualy phages choose them as their target), you might end up with somethingthat works.
I hope that's helpful!
You actually don't have to test protein-protein interaction in the early stage if a phage and its binding site has been characterized. Take the opportunity to stand on the shoulders of giants.
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