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Dr. Alvin Yeh Department of Biomedical Engineering Dr. Arne Lekven Department of Biology Josh Bergerson Normangee High School
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Components of Engineering
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Faculty Members
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Lab Group Members
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Angiogenesis New blood vessel (capillary) formation Important in tissue growth & repair Excessive cancerInsufficient stroke
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Angiogenic Process ECs detach from wall Degrade & penetrate basal lamina Invade surrounding ECM
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Extracellular Matrix Scaffold; structural support Adhesive contact sites Mechanical & biochemical signals
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Research Question What effect does changing the collagen fiber stiffness and thickness have on angiogenic patterns in vitro? angiogenesis in diseases vascularzing engineered tissue
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In Vitro Angiogenesis Model Endothelial cell monolayer Collagen gel preparation Serum–free medium
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Sandwich Modeling
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Fiber Thickness Polymerizing collagen at varying temperatures Observe angiogenic patterns in matrix
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Data Acquisition TPF, SHG & Light microscopy SHG detector TPF detector Ultrafast laser Objective
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Two-Photon Microscopy Used to create 3D images from optical sections Detects sample’s fluorescence (cell/GFP/etc) Wavelength ~ 405nm TPF-3DTPF-2D
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Second Harmonic Generation (SHG) Sample mixes 2 photons Detects collagen; crystal, repeating structure Not measuring fluorescence Wavelength ~ 480 nm Second Harmonic Generation (SHG) E2E2 E1E1 hv in Virtual States SHG TPF+SHG
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TPF & SHG Imaging depth ~ 500um Laser Bandwidth ~ 133nm centered at 800nm Ability to image living cells 10 femtosecond pulse laser (1x10 -14 s) PMT detectors
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Data Analysis Morphology Cellular Growth Lumen Development 1 mg/ml 2.5 mg/ml Brightfield TPF+SHG
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Possible Classroom Application Physics: Optics Wave properties Mechanics Chemistry: Electromagnetic Spectrum Behavior of Electrons Biochemistry
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Acknowledgements TAMU E3 RET Program National Science Foundation Nuclear Power Institute Dr. Alvin Yeh Research Group: Tissue Microscopy Lab Dr. Arne Lekven Lab Group
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Conventional Microscopy Non-laser light source Snapshot rather than scanning Imaging depth ~20um
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Single Photon Microscopy Imaging depth ~100um Continuous laser excitation Pinhole allows for optical sectioning Photobleaching of fluorescent probes
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Tracking Gene Expression Phenotypic expression of brain development genes is know but specifics are not (wnt1, pax2, fgf8) Genes can be tracked by tagging with fluorescent proteins Allows detection of gene being “turned on” during development
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Grown on collagen or fibrin scaffold Engineered Tissue Scaffolds skinblood vessels tendonligament soft connective tissue
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Spectral Two-Photon Microscopy 16 PMT spectrometer Computational linear unmixing
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Spectral Two-Photon Microscopy To detect gene expression Simultaneous detection of multiple fluorescent proteins Real-time study of live embryonic development
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Second Harmonic Generation (SHG) Detects collagen Requires crystal, repeating structure Not measuring fluorescence
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Optical Coherence Microscopy (OCM) Collects light reflected from sample (morphology) Collects data via spectral detector (significant power loss)
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Optical Coherence Microscopy (OCM) Detects fibrin, collagen, and cell Factor out collagen and cell through TPF & SHG Observe growth of cell scaffold under various conditions
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Wnt1 Gene Expression Mark Feltner, M.A. Skyline High School Dallas, Texas
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Laser’s 2-photon emission, in conjunction with fluorescent proteins, is providing us with more detailed imaging of developing embryos.
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Several of the genes discussed are oncogenes – they can, under some circumstances, initiate cancerous growth. (Q: these include which: wnt 1, wnt 8 (all wnt’s??) spt, pax 2…others?)
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Each gene is involved in early brain development. The sp5 gene expression, for instance, is involved in development of the midbrain, hindbrain and spinal cord, but not the forebrain. (Holly’s schematic here – circular, yellow. NB p 11. Shows mb/hb/sc/fb regions in yolked embryo)
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wnt1pax2a fgf8 Multiple genes work together in the same place at the same time
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In early zebrafish emryos, the mesoderm and endoderm are initially mixed. They differentiate.
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But these are ‘just’ fish, right? How is this relevant to us? In every vertebrate embryo, there is always a midbrain-hindbrain boundary. This goes for all mammalian species, including us, the mighty Homo sapiens.
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In fact, this diagram helps illustrate the commonalities of gene expression that all vertebrate species share.
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To recap: Before you can actually see a difference in cell formation, the cells are already expressing the various genes that will cause them to differentiate. The wnt1 gene appears to be conserved across multiple vertebrate species, including humans. Thus: understand zerbrafish early brain development, and we can better understand mammalian gene expression of brain development.
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This is huge. Currently, we know what expression of wnt1 gene does, but nobody knows the mechanism of how this gene gets turned on. This is one question that we hope to answer. Of course, there are many more.
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