A University of Utah team discovered a method for turning a small, US $40 needle into a 3-D microscope capable of taking images up to 70 times smaller than the width of a human hair. This new method not only produces high-quality images comparable to expensive microscopes, but may be implanted into the brains of living mice for imaging at the cellular level.
The study appears in the Aug. 18 issue of the journal Applied Physics Letters.
University of Utah engineers have developed a new microscopy method that uses a fine needle or cannula and a LED light to make 3-D images. They hope this new microscope technology, shown here, can be implanted into the brains of mice to show images of cells. (Photo Credit: Ganghun Kim, University of Utah) |
Designed by Rajesh Menon, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, and graduate student Ganghun Kim, the microscope technique works when an LED light is illuminated and guided through a fiberoptic needle or cannula. Returned pictures are reconstructed into 3-D images using algorithms developed by Menon and Kim.
“Unlike miniature microscopes, our approach does not use optics,” Menon says. “It’s primarily computational.”
He says this approach will allow researchers not only to take images far smaller than those taken by current miniature microscopes, but do it for a fraction of the cost.
Ganghun Kim, an electrical engineering graduate student at the University of Utah, holds a needle or cannula that is a key component of a new 3-D microscopy method that can now take pictures of objects 70 times smaller than a human hair and ultimately should be able to make images of cells inside the brains of living mice. (Photo Credit: Rajesh Menon, University of Utah) |
“We can get approximately 1-micron-resolution images that only US $250,000 and higher microscopes are capable of generating,” Menon says. “Miniature microscopes are limited to the few 10s of microns.”
Menon hopes to extend the technology in the future so it can see details down to submicron resolutions, compared with the current 1.4 microns. (A micron is a millionth of a meter. A human hair is about 100 microns wide.)
The microscope was originally designed for the lab of Nobel Prize-winning U human genetics professor, Mario Capecchi, whose team will use it to observe the brains of living mice to gain insight into how certain proteins in the brain react to various stimuli. Because the microscope can be assembled so inexpensively and easily go into hard-to-reach places, Menon and Kim expect many other uses for the device.
“This microscope will open up new avenues of research,” Menon says. “Its low-cost, small-size, large field-of-view and implantable features will allow researchers to use this in fields ranging from biochemistry to mining.”