Laser microsurgery in the GFP era : a cell biologist's perspective
Laser microsurgery in the GFP era : a cell biologist's perspective
Date
2007-06
Authors
Magidson, Valentin
Loncarek, Jadranka
Hergert, Polla
Rieder, Conly L.
Khodjakov, Alexey
Loncarek, Jadranka
Hergert, Polla
Rieder, Conly L.
Khodjakov, Alexey
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Abstract
Modern biology is based largely on a reductionistic ‘dissection’ approach – most cell
biologists try to determine how complex biological systems work by removing their individual
parts and studying the effects of this removal on the system. A variety of enzymatic and
mechanical methods have been developed to dissect large cell assemblies like tissues and organs.
Further, individual proteins can be inactivated or removed within a cell by genetic manipulations
(e.g., RNAi or gene knockouts). However, there is a growing demand for tools that allow
intracellular manipulations at the level of individual organelles. Laser microsurgery is ideally
suited for this purpose and the popularity of this approach is on the rise among cell biologists. In
this chapter we review some of the applications for laser microsurgery at the subcellular level,
and describe practical requirements for laser microsurgery instrumentation demanded in the
field. We also outline a relatively inexpensive but versatile laser microsurgery workstation that is
being used in our lab. Our major thesis is that the limitations of the technology are no longer at
the level of the laser, microscope or software, but instead only in defining creative questions and
in visualizing the target to be destroyed.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2007. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Methods in Cell Biology 82 (2007): 237, 239-266, doi:10.1016/S0091-679X(06)82007-8.