Colin Sheppard, Honorary Professorial Fellow at University of Wollongong, Australia
As part of the Imaging ONEWORLD series, the focus of these lectures is on microscopy and image analysis methods and how to apply these to your research. Almost all aspects of imaging such as sample preparation, labelling strategies, experimental workflows, ‘how-to’ image and analyse, as well as facilitating collaborations and inspiring new scientific ideas will be covered. Speakers will be available for questions and answers. The organisers, core facility staff from the University of Cambridge, Gurdon Institute, MRC-LMB and the ICR/Royal Marsden Trust are also able to continue the discussion and provide advice on your imaging projects.
Stefanie Reichelt, PhD has been head of the light microscopy facility at the CRUK Cambridge Institute. The core provides state-of-the-art imaging resources, training courses for scientists and students and develop new imaging systems as well as user-friendly analysis and acquisition tools for specific research applications. Stefanie is now Public Engagement Manager for the Biomedical Schools and teaches academically at Cambridge University, in scientific workshops and out-reach events. (http://cargocollective.com/StefanieReichelt)
Dr Alessandro Esposito obtained a PhD in Biophysics in 2006 working at the University of Utrecht and the European Neuroscience Institute in Goettingen for which he was awarded the ‘Sergio Ciani’ award by the Italian Society of Pure and Applied Biophysics. At the University of Cambridge, he then developed novel analytical tools contributing to redefining models of red blood cells homeostasis infected by P. falciparum (malaria). In recognition of his early work, in 2009 Alessandro was awarded a Life Science Interface fellowship by the EPSRC to establish foster the development of heavily multiplexed biochemical imaging. Soon after he moved to the MRC Cancer Unit where he lead the ‘Systems Microscopy initiative’ and retrained in cancer biology. During these years, Alessandro’s work developed into two research streams: i) the study of cellular responses to DNA damage and mutations in signalling pathways and ii) the innovation of biochemical imaging technologies. His team contributed to revealing the vast cell-to-cell variability in stress responses of genetically identical cells, a feature of biological systems that hinder the efficacy of disease management and therapeutic efficacy. Since 2019, Alessandro leads a transdisciplinary research programme at the MRC Cancer Unit in Cambridge devoted to understanding how DNA damage and mutations in KRAS derange homeostatic programmes leading to cancer. His group combines multi-omics data with single-cell biochemical imaging techniques aiming to achieve a deeper understanding of cancer phenotypes during the earliest stages of carcinogenesis, with particular attention to cell-to-cell variability of non-genetic origin and cell-to-cell communication.
Kirti Prakash is a computer scientist by training (Bachelors and Masters degree) but a biologist at heart (PhD degree). Kirti aspires to be an inventor and develop new imaging tools for cell biology and neuroscience. Kirti did his Masters in Computer Science from Aalto University (Finland) and PhD in Biology from Heidelberg University (Germany). During his PhD, he developed a new method to image DNA which led to the first high-resolution images of the epigenetic landscape of meiotic chromosomes and mechanisms behind chromosome condensation. The doctoral research earned him several awards including Springer Best PhD Thesis Prize. After his PhD, he did a couple of postdocs at Carnegie Institution for Science (USA) and University of Cambridge (UK). The primary highlights of his research here were laser-free superresolution microscopy and development of a high-content imaging pipeline to quantify single-cell gene expression. Formerly at the National Physical Laboratory (NPL), and currently working at the Institute for Cancer Research (ICR) and Royal Marsden Trust, he is working on microscope development and image analysis.
An optical physicist and specialist in light microscopy and head of the Light Microscopy facility at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, University of Cambridge.
We follow the history of the development of microscopy, especially those leading up to the modern techniques of light sheet microscopy, structured illumination microscopy, laser scanning microscopy, confocal microscopy, and multiphoton microscopy.
University of Wollongong, Australia
Colin Sheppard is Honorary Professorial Fellow at the University of Wollongong, Australia; External Collaborator and Visiting Scientist with the Italian Institute of Technology, Genoa, Italy; and Supernumerary Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford. Previously he was Professor and Head in the Department of Bioengineering at National University of Singapore; Professor of Physics at the University of Sydney; and University Lecturer in Engineering Science at the University of Oxford. He obtained the PhD degree in Engineering from University of Cambridge, and the DSc in Physical Sciences from the University of Oxford. He has held visiting positions at many different institutions, including UC-Berkeley, MIT, Stanford University, EPFL, TU-Delft and Tokyo University.
He was elected Fellow of OSA, SPIE, IEE, Institute of Physics, Japan Society for Applied Physics, and the Royal Microscopical Society. He served as Vice-President of the International Commission for Optics (ICO), and as President of the International Society for Optics Within Life Sciences (OWLS). He was awarded the Italian Society for Optics and Photonics Galileo Galilei Medal, Institute of Physics Optics and Photonics Division Prize, Max Planck Bonhöffer Medal, Humboldt Research Award, ISATA Mercedes Award, National Physical Laboratory Metrology Award, Prince of Wales Award for Industrial Innovation, British Technology Group Academic Enterprise Award, and the IEE Gyr and Landis Prize.
He developed an early laser microscope (1975), published the theory of imaging in confocal microscopes (1977), patented scanning microscopy using Bessel beams (1977), proposed the Bessel-Gauss beam (1978), published the first demonstration of scanning two-photon microscopy (by SHG) (1977), proposed two-photon fluorescence and CARS microscopy (1978), launched the first commercial confocal microscope (1982), developed the first confocal microscope with computer control and storage (1983), published images using differential phase contrast (1984), published the theory of Nomarski differential interference contrast (1984), and proposed scanning microscopy using a detector array with pixel reassignment, now known as image scanning microscopy (1988).