First Authors | Maresca Marcello |
---|---|
Authors | Maresca Marcello, Davide Accardi, Sebastian T. Bundschuh, Jeffrey Oegema, Andrey Andreev, Emmanuel G. Reynaud, Jan Peychl |
Corresponding Authors | Emmanuel G. Reynaud |
Last Authors | Jan Peychl |
Book Volume Title | Light Sheet Fluorescence Microscopy |
Series Title | |
Chapter Number | 12 |
Publisher | Wiley-VCH |
Book Editors | Emmanuel G. Reynaud |
ISBN | 978-3-527-34135-1 |
First Page | 365 |
Last Page | 381 |
Open Access | false |
Print Publication Date | 2024-02-09 |
Online Publication Date | 2024-02-09 |
Abstract | New imaging technologies are always a challenge when they enter core imaging facilities or become a shared system that accommodates several users, projects, and demands. Not only they need to be set up and run smoothly in this multiuser environment (that requires staff training, maintenance, and scheduling), but they are needed either for short time imaging sessions on fixed samples, or sometimes blocked for several days for a long-term life imaging of developmental events, while delivering large amount of data. To help other imaging centers to establish efficient imaging process and smooth user experience, here we present the experience from two different imaging facilities that have used light sheet microscopes even before the first commercial systems became available. The first imaging platform has implemented three commercial light-sheet systems (2 × Lightsheet Z.1, Zeiss and 1 × LS1, Viventis) in the multiuser environment of the core light microscopy facility of the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics (MPI-CBG) in Dresden (Germany), which serves about 220 users per year, and it has an average volume of annual booked instrument time of 40 000 hours. The second is the Centre for Cell Imaging at Liverpool University (United Kingdom), part of the Liverpool Shared Research Facilities network, which serves about 130 users per year and has an average volume of annual booked instrument time of about 24 000 hours. The CCI was the first open access core facility in United Kingdom to set up a Zeiss Lightsheet Z.1 microscope. Here we share some practical tips for those who plan to implement this technology in their institutes. |
Cover Image | |
Affiliated With | Computer Department, Light Microscopy Facility |
Selected By | |
Acknowledged Services | |
Publication Status | Published |
Edoc Link | |
Sfx Link | |
DOI | 10.1002/9783527803910.ch12 |
PubMed ID | |
WebOfScience Link | |
Alternative Full Text URL | https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/9783527803910.ch12 |
Display Publisher Download Only | false |
Visible On MPI-CBG Website | true |
PDF Downloadable | true |
Created By | thuem |
Added Date | 2025-02-27 |
Last Edited By | thuem |
Last Edited Date | 2025-02-28 09:44:33.315 |
Library ID | 8922 |
Document ID | |
Entry Complete | true |
eDoc Compliant | true |
Include in Edoc Report | true |
In Pure | true |
Ready for eDoc Export | false |
Author Affiliations Complete | false |
Project Name | |
Project URL | |
Grant ID | |
Funding Programme | |
Funding Organisation |