Study of the Motility of Biological Cells by Digital Holographic Microscopy

In this dissertation, I utilize digital holographic microscopy (DHM) to study the motility of biological cells. As an important feature of DHM, quantitative phase microscopy by digital holography (DH-QPM) is applied to study the cell-substrate interactions and migratory behavior of adhesive cells. T...

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Main Author: Yu, Xiao
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5159
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6355&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-63552019-10-04T05:13:08Z Study of the Motility of Biological Cells by Digital Holographic Microscopy Yu, Xiao In this dissertation, I utilize digital holographic microscopy (DHM) to study the motility of biological cells. As an important feature of DHM, quantitative phase microscopy by digital holography (DH-QPM) is applied to study the cell-substrate interactions and migratory behavior of adhesive cells. The traction force exerted by biological cells is visualized as distortions in flexible substrata. Motile fibroblasts produce wrinkles when attached to a silicone rubber film. For the non-wrinkling elastic substrate polyacrylamide (PAA), surface deformation due to fibroblast adhesion and motility is visualized as tangential and vertical displacement. This surface deformation and the associated cellular traction forces are measured from phase profiles based on the degree of distortion. Intracellular fluctuations in amoeba cells are also analyzed statistically by DH-QPM. With the capacity of yielding quantitative measures directly, DH-QPM provides efficient and versatile means for quantitative analysis of cellular or intracellular motility. Three-dimensional profiling and tracking by DHM enable label-free and quantitative analysis of the characteristics and dynamic processes of objects, since DHM can record real-time data for micro-scale objects and produce a single hologram containing all the information about their three-dimensional structure. Here, I utilize DHM to visualize suspended microspheres and microfibers in three dimensions, and record the four-dimensional trajectories of free-swimming cells in the absence of mechanical focus adjustment. The displacement of microfibers due to interactions with cells in three spatial dimensions is measured as a function of time at sub-second and micrometer levels in a direct and straightforward manner. It has thus been shown that DHM is a highly efficient and versatile means for quantitative tracking and analysis of cell motility. 2014-05-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5159 https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6355&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons cell-substrate interaction digital holography four-dimensional tracking three-dimensional profiling traction force Biophysics Optics
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic cell-substrate interaction
digital holography
four-dimensional tracking
three-dimensional profiling
traction force
Biophysics
Optics
spellingShingle cell-substrate interaction
digital holography
four-dimensional tracking
three-dimensional profiling
traction force
Biophysics
Optics
Yu, Xiao
Study of the Motility of Biological Cells by Digital Holographic Microscopy
description In this dissertation, I utilize digital holographic microscopy (DHM) to study the motility of biological cells. As an important feature of DHM, quantitative phase microscopy by digital holography (DH-QPM) is applied to study the cell-substrate interactions and migratory behavior of adhesive cells. The traction force exerted by biological cells is visualized as distortions in flexible substrata. Motile fibroblasts produce wrinkles when attached to a silicone rubber film. For the non-wrinkling elastic substrate polyacrylamide (PAA), surface deformation due to fibroblast adhesion and motility is visualized as tangential and vertical displacement. This surface deformation and the associated cellular traction forces are measured from phase profiles based on the degree of distortion. Intracellular fluctuations in amoeba cells are also analyzed statistically by DH-QPM. With the capacity of yielding quantitative measures directly, DH-QPM provides efficient and versatile means for quantitative analysis of cellular or intracellular motility. Three-dimensional profiling and tracking by DHM enable label-free and quantitative analysis of the characteristics and dynamic processes of objects, since DHM can record real-time data for micro-scale objects and produce a single hologram containing all the information about their three-dimensional structure. Here, I utilize DHM to visualize suspended microspheres and microfibers in three dimensions, and record the four-dimensional trajectories of free-swimming cells in the absence of mechanical focus adjustment. The displacement of microfibers due to interactions with cells in three spatial dimensions is measured as a function of time at sub-second and micrometer levels in a direct and straightforward manner. It has thus been shown that DHM is a highly efficient and versatile means for quantitative tracking and analysis of cell motility.
author Yu, Xiao
author_facet Yu, Xiao
author_sort Yu, Xiao
title Study of the Motility of Biological Cells by Digital Holographic Microscopy
title_short Study of the Motility of Biological Cells by Digital Holographic Microscopy
title_full Study of the Motility of Biological Cells by Digital Holographic Microscopy
title_fullStr Study of the Motility of Biological Cells by Digital Holographic Microscopy
title_full_unstemmed Study of the Motility of Biological Cells by Digital Holographic Microscopy
title_sort study of the motility of biological cells by digital holographic microscopy
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2014
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5159
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6355&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT yuxiao studyofthemotilityofbiologicalcellsbydigitalholographicmicroscopy
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