DocumentCode :
1941591
Title :
Bridging the imaging gap in nanobiology with three-dimensional electron microscopy
Author :
Subramaniam, Sriram
Author_Institution :
Center for Cancer Res., Nat. Cancer Inst., Bethesda, MD
fYear :
2006
fDate :
15-18 Jan. 2006
Firstpage :
37
Lastpage :
37
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Emerging methods in three-dimensional biological electron microscopy provide powerful tools and great promise to bridge a critical gap in imaging in the biomedical size spectrum. This gap comprises a size range of great interest in biology and medicine that includes cellular protein machines, giant protein and nucleic acid assemblies, small subcellular organelles and small bacteria. In our laboratory at the National Cancer Institute, NIH, we are using a variety of approaches that utilize electron microscopic imaging to discover and analyze biological complexity within the size gap with linear dimensions of about 50-1000 nm. A key mission of our laboratory is to quantitatively describe the spatial and temporal architecture of key molecular machines that fall into this "nano gap". Areas of current interest include: (i) the development and application of novel technologies for three-dimensional electron microscopy of specimens ranging in size from small molecules to tissues, including automated approaches to analyze the molecular structure and sub-cellular location of a variety of nanoparticles, (ii) determination of the dynamic spatial and temporal architectures of cellular structures and molecular machines involved in fundamental process such as energy transduction, cell division and chemotaxis, and (iii) determination of molecular mechanisms underlying the neutralization and cellular entry of HIV
Keywords :
biochemistry; biological techniques; cellular biophysics; electron microscopy; microorganisms; molecular biophysics; molecular configurations; nanoparticles; proteins; spatiotemporal phenomena; 50 to 1000 nm; HIV; bacteria; cell division; cellular protein machines; cellular structures; chemotaxis; dynamic spatial architectures; dynamic temporal architectures; energy transduction; giant protein; molecular structure; nanobiology; nanoparticles; nucleic acid assemblies; subcellular organelles; three-dimensional biological electron microscopy; Assembly; Biomedical imaging; Bridges; Cancer; Cells (biology); Electron microscopy; Laboratories; Microorganisms; Nanobioscience; Proteins;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Bio Micro and Nanosystems Conference, 2006. BMN '06
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0056-2
Electronic_ISBN :
1-4244-0057-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/BMN.2006.330920
Filename :
4129406
Link To Document :
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