Abhishek Kumar
National Institutes of Health
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Publication
Featured researches published by Abhishek Kumar.
Nature Protocols | 2014
Abhishek Kumar; Yicong Wu; Ryan Christensen; Panagiotis Chandris; William Gandler; Evan S. McCreedy; Alexandra Bokinsky; Daniel A. Colón-Ramos; Zhirong Bao; Matthew J. McAuliffe; Gary Rondeau; Hari Shroff
We describe the construction and use of a compact dual-view inverted selective plane illumination microscope (diSPIM) for time-lapse volumetric (4D) imaging of living samples at subcellular resolution. Our protocol enables a biologist with some prior microscopy experience to assemble a diSPIM from commercially available parts, to align optics and test system performance, to prepare samples, and to control hardware and data processing with our software. Unlike existing light sheet microscopy protocols, our method does not require the sample to be embedded in agarose; instead, samples are prepared conventionally on glass coverslips. Tissue culture cells and Caenorhabditis elegans embryos are used as examples in this protocol; successful implementation of the protocol results in isotropic resolution and acquisition speeds up to several volumes per s on these samples. Assembling and verifying diSPIM performance takes ∼6 d, sample preparation and data acquisition take up to 5 d and postprocessing takes 3–8 h, depending on the size of the data.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2016
Abhishek Kumar; Mingxing Ouyang; Koen Van den Dries; Ewan J. McGhee; Keiichiro Tanaka; Marie D. Anderson; Alex Groisman; Benjamin T. Goult; Kurt I. Anderson; Martin A. Schwartz
The cytoskeletal adapter protein talin plays a prominent role in adhesive structures connecting integrins to the actin cytoskeleton. In this work, Kumar et al. use a novel talin sensor to measure talin tension and provide insights into focal adhesion force transmission and mechanosensitivity.
IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices | 2016
Gerwin H. Gelinck; Abhishek Kumar; Date Moet; Jan-Laurens van der Steen; Albert J. J. M. van Breemen; Santosh Shanmugam; A. Langen; Jan Gilot; Pim Groen; Ronn Andriessen; Matthias Simon; Walter Ruetten; Alexander Ulrich Douglas; Rob Raaijmakers; Pawel E. Malinowski; Kris Myny
We made and characterized an X-ray detector on a 25-μm-thick plastic substrate that is capable of medicalgrade performance. As an indirect conversion flat panel detector, it combined a standard scintillator with an organic photodetector (OPD) layer and oxide thin-film transistor backplane. Using solution-processed organic bulk heterojunction photodiode rather than the usual amorphous silicon, process temperature is reduced to be compatible with plastic film substrates, and a number of costly lithography steps are eliminated, opening the door to lower production costs. With dark currents as low as 1 pA/mm2 and sensitivity of 0.2 A/W the OPD also meets functional requirements: the proof-of-concept detector delivers high-resolution, dynamic images at 10 frames/s, and 200 pixels/in using X-ray doses as low as 3 μGy/frame.
Optica | 2016
Yicong Wu; Panagiotis Chandris; Peter W. Winter; Edward Y. Kim; Valentin Jaumouillé; Abhishek Kumar; Min Guo; Jacqueline M. Leung; Corey Smith; Ivan Rey-Suarez; Huafeng Liu; Clare M. Waterman; Kumaran S. Ramamurthi; Patrick J. La Riviere; Hari Shroff
Most fluorescence microscopes are inefficient, collecting only a small fraction of the emitted light at any instant. Besides wasting valuable signal, this inefficiency also reduces spatial resolution and causes imaging volumes to exhibit significant resolution anisotropy. We describe microscopic and computational techniques that address these problems by simultaneously capturing and subsequently fusing and deconvolving multiple specimen views. Unlike previous methods that serially capture multiple views, our approach improves spatial resolution without introducing any additional illumination dose or compromising temporal resolution relative to conventional imaging. When applying our methods to single-view wide-field or dual-view light-sheet microscopy, we achieve a twofold improvement in volumetric resolution (~235 nm × 235 nm × 340 nm) as demonstrated on a variety of samples including microtubules in Toxoplasma gondii, SpoVM in sporulating Bacillus subtilis, and multiple protein distributions and organelles in eukaryotic cells. In every case, spatial resolution is improved with no drawback by harnessing previously unused fluorescence.
Oncotarget | 2017
Mikako Ogawa; Yusuke Tomita; Yuko Nakamura; Min-Jung Lee; Sunmin Lee; Saori Tomita; Tadanobu Nagaya; Kazuhide Sato; Toyohiko Yamauchi; Hidenao Iwai; Abhishek Kumar; Timothy A. J. Haystead; Hari Shroff; Peter L. Choyke; Jane B. Trepel; Hisataka Kobayashi
Immunogenic cell death (ICD) is a form of cell death that activates an adaptive immune response against dead-cell-associated antigens. Cancer cells killed via ICD can elicit antitumor immunity. ICD is efficiently induced by near-infrared photo-immunotherapy (NIR-PIT) that selectively kills target-cells on which antibody-photoabsorber conjugates bind and are activated by NIR light exposure. Advanced live cell microscopies showed that NIR-PIT caused rapid and irreversible damage to the cell membrane function leading to swelling and bursting, releasing intracellular components due to the influx of water into the cell. The process also induces relocation of ICD bio markers including calreticulin, Hsp70 and Hsp90 to the cell surface and the rapid release of immunogenic signals including ATP and HMGB1 followed by maturation of immature dendritic cells. Thus, NIR-PIT is a therapy that kills tumor cells by ICD, eliciting a host immune response against tumor.
Journal of information display | 2015
Manoj Nag; Robert Muller; Soeren Steudel; Steve Smout; Ajay Bhoolokam; Kris Myny; Sarah Schols; Jan Genoe; Brian Cobb; Abhishek Kumar; Gerwin H. Gelinck; Yusuke Fukui; Guido Groeseneken; Paul Heremans
We demonstrated self-aligned amorphous-Indium-Gallium-Zinc-Oxide (a-IGZO) thin-film transistors (TFTs) where the source–drain (S/D) regions were made conductive via chemical reduction of the a-IGZO via metallic calcium (Ca). Due to the higher chemical reactivity of Ca, the process can be operated at lower temperatures. The Ca process has the additional benefit of the reaction byproduct calcium oxide being removable through a water rinse step, thus simplifying the device integration. The Ca-reduced a-IGZO showed a sheet resistance (RSHEET) value of 0.7u2005kΩ/sq., with molybdenum as the S/D metal. The corresponding a-IGZO TFTs exhibited good electrical properties, such as a field-effect mobility (μFE) of 12.0u2005cm2/(Vu2005s), a subthreshold slope (SS−1) of 0.4u2005V/decade, and an on/off current ratio (ION/OFF) above 108.
BMC Bioinformatics | 2015
Anthony Santella; Raúl Catena; Ismar Kovacevic; Pavak Shah; Zidong Yu; Javier Marquina-Solis; Abhishek Kumar; Yicong Wu; James C. Schaff; Daniel A. Colón-Ramos; Hari Shroff; William A. Mohler; Zhirong Bao
BackgroundImaging and image analysis advances are yielding increasingly complete and complicated records of cellular events in tissues and whole embryos. The ability to follow hundreds to thousands of cells at the individual level demands a spatio-temporal data infrastructure: tools to assemble and collate knowledge about development spatially in a manner analogous to geographic information systems (GIS). Just as GIS indexes items or events based on their spatio-temporal or 4D location on the Earth these tools would organize knowledge based on location within the tissues or embryos. Developmental processes are highly context-specific, but the complexity of the 4D environment in which they unfold is a barrier to assembling an understanding of any particular process from diverse sources of information. In the same way that GIS aids the understanding and use of geo-located large data sets, software can, with a proper frame of reference, allow large biological data sets to be understood spatially. Intuitive tools are needed to navigate the spatial structure of complex tissue, collate large data sets and existing knowledge with this spatial structure and help users derive hypotheses about developmental mechanisms.ResultsToward this goal we have developed WormGUIDES, a mobile application that presents a 4D developmental atlas for Caenorhabditis elegans. The WormGUIDES mobile app enables users to navigate a 3D model depicting the nuclear positions of all cells in the developing embryo. The identity of each cell can be queried with a tap, and community databases searched for available information about that cell. Information about ancestry, fate and gene expression can be used to label cells and craft customized visualizations that highlight cells as potential players in an event of interest. Scenes are easily saved, shared and published to other WormGUIDES users. The mobile app is available for Android and iOS platforms.ConclusionWormGUIDES provides an important tool for examining developmental processes and developing mechanistic hypotheses about their control. Critically, it provides the typical end user with an intuitive interface for developing and sharing custom visualizations of developmental processes. Equally important, because users can select cells based on their position and search for information about them, the app also serves as a spatially organized index into the large body of knowledge available to the C. elegans community online. Moreover, the app can be used to create and publish the result of exploration: interactive content that brings other researchers and students directly to the spatio-temporal point of insight. Ultimately the app will incorporate a detailed time lapse record of cell shape, beginning with neurons. This will add the key ability to navigate and understand the developmental events that result in the coordinated and precise emergence of anatomy, particularly the wiring of the nervous system.
eLife | 2015
Ryan Christensen; Alexandra Bokinsky; Anthony Santella; Yicong Wu; Javier Marquina-Solis; Min Guo; Ismar Kovacevic; Abhishek Kumar; Peter W. Winter; Nicole Tashakkori; Evan S. McCreedy; Huafeng Liu; Matthew J. McAuliffe; William A. Mohler; Daniel A. Colón-Ramos; Zhirong Bao; Hari Shroff
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans possesses a simple embryonic nervous system with few enough neurons that the growth of each cell could be followed to provide a systems-level view of development. However, studies of single cell development have largely been conducted in fixed or pre-twitching live embryos, because of technical difficulties associated with embryo movement in late embryogenesis. We present open-source untwisting and annotation software (http://mipav.cit.nih.gov/plugin_jws/mipav_worm_plugin.php) that allows the investigation of neurodevelopmental events in late embryogenesis and apply it to track the 3D positions of seam cell nuclei, neurons, and neurites in multiple elongating embryos. We also provide a tutorial describing how to use the software (Supplementary file 1) and a detailed description of the untwisting algorithm (Appendix). The detailed positional information we obtained enabled us to develop a composite model showing movement of these cells and neurites in an average worm embryo. The untwisting and cell tracking capabilities of our method provide a foundation on which to catalog C. elegans neurodevelopment, allowing interrogation of developmental events in previously inaccessible periods of embryogenesis. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.10070.001
Biophysical Journal | 2017
Evan L. Ardiel; Abhishek Kumar; Joseph Marbach; Ryan Christensen; Rishi Gupta; William Duncan; Jonathan S. Daniels; Nico Stuurman; Daniel A. Colón-Ramos; Hari Shroff
The lack of physiological recordings from Caenorhabditis elegans embryos stands in stark contrast to the comprehensive anatomical and gene expression datasets already available. Using light-sheet fluorescence microscopy to address the challenges associated with functional imaging at this developmental stage, we recorded calcium dynamics in muscles and neurons and developed analysis strategies to relate activity and movement. In muscles, we found that the initiation of twitching was associated with a spreading calcium wave in a dorsal muscle bundle. Correlated activity in muscle bundles was linked with early twitching and eventual coordinated movement. To identify neuronal correlates of behavior, we monitored brainwide activity with subcellular resolution and identified a particularly active cell associated with muscle contractions. Finally, imaging neurons of a well-defined adult motor circuit, we found that reversals in the eggshell correlated with calcium transients in AVA interneurons.
The Biological Bulletin | 2016
Abhishek Kumar; Ryan Christensen; Min Guo; Panos Chandris; William Duncan; Yicong Wu; Anthony Santella; Mark Moyle; Peter W. Winter; Daniel A. Colón-Ramos; Zhirong Bao; Hari Shroff
Dual-view inverted selective plane illumination microscopy (diSPIM) enables high-speed, long-term, four-dimensional (4D) imaging with isotropic spatial resolution. It is also compatible with conventional sample mounting on glass coverslips. However, broadening of the light sheet at distances far from the beam waist and sample-induced scattering degrades diSPIM contrast and optical sectioning. We describe two simple improvements that address both issues and entail no additional hardware modifications to the base diSPIM. First, we demonstrate improved diSPIM sectioning by keeping the light sheet and detection optics stationary, and scanning the sample through the stationary light sheet (rather than scanning the broadening light sheet and detection plane through the stationary sample, as in conventional diSPIM). This stage-scanning approach allows a thinner sheet to be used when imaging laterally extended samples, such as fixed microtubules or motile mitochondria in cell monolayers, and produces finer contrast than does conventional diSPIM. We also used stage-scanning diSPIM to obtain high-quality, 4D nuclear datasets derived from an uncompressed nematode embryo, and performed lineaging analysis to track 97% of cells until twitching. Second, we describe the improvement of contrast in thick, scattering specimens by synchronizing light-sheet synthesis with the rolling, electronic shutter of our scientific complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (sCMOS) detector. This maneuver forms a virtual confocal slit in the detection path, partially removing out-of-focus light. We demonstrate the applicability of our combined stage- and slit-scanning-methods by imaging pollen grains and nuclear and neuronal structures in live nematode embryos. All acquisition and analysis code is freely available online.