Morning
            Session 
10.00-10.15  Welcome and latest FILM
          News (Tony Magee)
        New
microscopes,
        new equipment, new staff 
10.15-11.15 
          Basics of
          microscopy (Martin Spitaler, FILM)
        Image
formation,
        fluorescence, visualisation, quantitation 
11.15-11.35 
            coffee
            & tea break
11.35-12.15 
          Sample
          preparation for live and fixed samples (Stephen Rothery, FILM)
        Fixatives,
strategies,
        viability, autofluorescence 
Microscopy
            Match-Maker 
12.15-13.00
           Microscopy
          Match-Maker
        Research
performed
        in FILM, presented by users
        through 3 min snapshot presentations
13.00-14.00 
            Sandwich
            lunch
          with
opportunity
          to see the new super-resolution microscope 
Afternoon
            Session
14.00-14.40 Super-resolution
microscopy
          (Debora Keller, FILM)
        PALM,
STORM,
        SIM, resolution limits, artefacts
14.40-15.00 
            coffee
            & tea break
PLENARY
            SESSION 
15.00-15.55  Cristina Lo Celso, Imperial
            College: “Intra-vital
              imaging in stem cell biology”
15.55-16.50
          Philipp
            Kukura,
            Oxford: “Molecular Imaging”
16.50-17.00
          Tony Magee: Round-up 
FILM
          Microscopy Day
          2014: Plenary session
Cristina Lo Celso, Imperial College: “Intra-vital imaging in stem cell biology”
  After a PhD from University
        College London in
        the field of epidermal stem cell biology, Dr Lo Celso worked as
        a postdoc
        at Harvard University developing intra-vital microscopy of the
        haematopoietic
        stem cell niche. In 2009 she was appointed assistant professor
        at Imperial
        College London, where she has established a research group
        focussing on understanding
        the cellular mechanisms regulating haematopoietic stem cell
        (HSC) function and
        leukaemia development and . In close collaboration with FILM,
        her group has
        developed tools to study HSCs in their native bone marrow
        environment. She will
        present an interdisciplinary approach combining intra-vital
        microscopy
        techniques, computational image analysis, molecular profiling
        and mathematical
        modelling and the group's most recent observations of the
        dynamic interactions
        between HSCs and the bone marrow microenvironment. 
Philipp Kukura, Oxford: “Molecular Imaging”
The
        primary goal of
        optical microscopy is to visualise microscopic structure and
        dynamics.
        Developments over the past decades have enabled routine studies
        down to the
        single molecule level and structural observations far beyond the
        diffraction
        limit through the use of fluorescence as a contrast mechanism.
        Despite its many
        advantages, one of the fundamental limitations of fluorescence
        detection is the
        frequency with which photons can be emitted and thus detected.
        As a
        consequence, imaging speeds remain limited to few to tens of
        frames per
        resulting in a considerable gap between the speed at which
        dynamics can be
        recorded and the speed of motion on the nanoscale. 
I will describe an alternative approach to optical microscopy that relies on the ultra-efficient detection of light scattering called interferometric scattering microscopy (iSCAT). I will show that iSCAT can follow the motion of nanoscopic labels with nm precision down to the microsecond regime, the relevant timescale for a majority of dynamics on the nanoscale. Thereby, we are able to address a surprising variety of fundamental questions ranging from the mechanism underlying processive molecular motion to the existence and formation of lipid rafts in membranes. Finally, I will show that iSCAT can detect, image and track the motion of single, proteins using light scattering without the need for any labels.
        FILM - Facility for Imaging by Light Microscopy
        - Facility Manager -
        Sir Alexander Fleming Building 401
        Imperial College London / South Kensington
        Exhibition Road
        London SW7 2AZ
        UK