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.

Scientific Organisers


Pulsing, far and small: studying mammalian neuronal circuits with correlative light, X-ray and electron microscopy

Integrating physiology and structure at the neuronal circuit scale can provide a mechanistic understanding on how that circuit works. A correlative multimodal imaging pipeline that combines in vivo 2-photon microscopy (2P), synchrotron X-ray computed tomography with propagation-based phase contrast (SXRT) and serial block-face electron microscopy generates these multimodal maps reliably. In it, SXRT brings subcellular context of multi-mm3 landscapes non-destructively. SXRT also enables a bridging use: 2P and SXRT datasets can be matched at single-cell accuracy, informing on e.g. optimal specimen trimming strategies. Altogether, this approach enables harnessing the resolving power of multiphoton, hard X-ray and volume electron microscopy technologies to create detailed multimodal maps of brain circuits.