Receives Grant to Establish Advanced Light-Sheet Microscopy Laboratory

As the takes a leading role in developing new and emerging research organisms such as squid, butterflies, axolotls, etc., there is a growing need for optical microscopes that can image large embryos/organisms for several hours to days, without harming them due to light exposure.

To meet this need, the recently received a grant from the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation to build an advanced light-sheet microscopy system. This innovative system will be ideally suited to imaging embryos and organisms spanning a wide range of sizes (100μm-1 mm), gently and for long periods of time. It will primarily be used with novel research organisms that will advance our understanding of development, regeneration, and the formation of neural circuits.

The grant to is part of ain advanced light-sheet technology. Five of the other grant recipients have connections to the ’s Advanced Research Training courses as alumni, course faculty, and/or course lecturers.

Microscopy innovator Abhishek Kumar. Credit: Anthony Mautino

This new, cutting-edge microscopy system at , and training to use it, will be freely accessible to the hundreds of scientists and students that convene at the each year. Abhishek Kumar, Investigator and CZI Imaging Scientist, is the principal investigator on the grant and initiative. The co-PIs are Directorand Associate ScientistKaren Echeverri.

A limiting factor for light-sheet microscopy is handling and analyzing the large amounts of imaging data the instrument collects. As an integral part of this new, open-source microscopy system, which the investigators call the Multi-View SPIM, efficient approaches for batch handling of data on high-performance Graphical Processing Units (GPUs) are being innovated. The system will also leverage computer vision and deep learning approaches to optimize analysis of the imaging data collected.

This technology will form the core of a new lightsheet laboratory at that aims to enhance ’s already conducive environment for interdisciplinary research, disseminate and share the new lightsheet system and image analysis tools with the broader community, train researchers at all educational levels, transfer knowledge via online tools and in-person workshops at the and elsewhere, and enable biological discoveries.

Other collaborators in the initiative include, associate professor in Cell and Molecular Biology at the University of Chicago;, director of the Research Computing Center, University of Chicago; and, Anthony Mautino, andf of the .

COMING SOON! is hosting a conference and workshop on Light-Sheet Microscopy May 8-14, 2021.Registration information is here.