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Dive into the research topics where Christopher Dunsby is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher Dunsby.


Analytical Chemistry | 2009

Continuous-Flow Polymerase Chain Reaction of Single-Copy DNA in Microfluidic Microdroplets

Yolanda Schaerli; Robert C. R. Wootton; Tom Robinson; Viktor Stein; Christopher Dunsby; Mark A. A. Neil; Paul M. W. French; Andrew J. deMello; Chris Abell; Florian Hollfelder

We present a high throughput microfluidic device for continuous-flow polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in water-in-oil droplets of nanoliter volumes. The circular design of this device allows droplets to pass through alternating temperature zones and complete 34 cycles of PCR in only 17 min, avoiding temperature cycling of the entire device. The temperatures for the applied two-temperature PCR protocol can be adjusted according to requirements of template and primers. These temperatures were determined with fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) inside the droplets, exploiting the temperature-dependent fluorescence lifetime of rhodamine B. The successful amplification of an 85 base-pair long template from four different start concentrations was demonstrated. Analysis of the product by gel-electrophoresis, sequencing, and real-time PCR showed that the amplification is specific and the amplification factors of up to 5 x 10(6)-fold are comparable to amplification factors obtained in a benchtop PCR machine. The high efficiency allows amplification from a single molecule of DNA per droplet. This device holds promise for convenient integration with other microfluidic devices and adds a critical missing component to the laboratory-on-a-chip toolkit.


PLOS Biology | 2011

Remodelling of Cortical Actin Where Lytic Granules Dock at Natural Killer Cell Immune Synapses Revealed by Super-Resolution Microscopy

Alice C N Brown; Stephane Oddos; Ian M. Dobbie; Juha Matti Alakoskela; Richard M. Parton; Philipp Eissmann; Mark A. A. Neil; Christopher Dunsby; Paul M. W. French; Ilan Davis; Daniel M. Davis

Super-resolution 3D imaging reveals remodeling of the cortical actin meshwork at the natural killer cell immune synapse, which is likely to be important for secretion of lytic granules.


Optics Letters | 2008

Stimulated emission depletion microscopy with a supercontinuum source and fluorescence lifetime imaging

Egidijus Auksorius; Bosanta R. Boruah; Christopher Dunsby; Peter M. P. Lanigan; Gordon T. Kennedy; Mark A. A. Neil; Paul M. W. French

We demonstrate stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy implemented in a laser scanning confocal microscope using excitation light derived from supercontinuum generation in a microstructured optical fiber. Images with resolution improvement beyond the far-field diffraction limit in both the lateral and axial directions were acquired by scanning overlapped excitation and depletion beams in two dimensions using the flying spot scanner of a commercially available laser scanning confocal microscope. The spatial properties of the depletion beam were controlled holographically using a programmable spatial light modulator, which can rapidly change between different STED imaging modes and also compensate for aberrations in the optical path. STED fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy is demonstrated through the use of time-correlated single photon counting.


Journal of Physics D | 2003

Techniques for depth-resolved imaging through turbid media including coherence-gated imaging

Christopher Dunsby; P M W French

The present invention relates to a method of manufacture of hemispherical end plates to be adhered to the opposite ends of a cylindrical pressure container, or spherical containers, especially smaller and thick-walled spherical pressure containers such as, for example, mixing spheres to be used for a generator boiler, distributor spheres, spherical containers for storing liquid hydrogen, etc.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2006

Microclusters of inhibitory killer immunoglobulin–like receptor signaling at natural killer cell immunological synapses

Bebhinn Treanor; Peter M. P. Lanigan; Sunil Kumar; Christopher Dunsby; Ian Munro; Egidijus Auksorius; Fiona J. Culley; Marco A. Purbhoo; David Phillips; Mark A. A. Neil; Deborah N. Burshtyn; Paul M. W. French; Daniel M. Davis

We report the supramolecular organization of killer Ig–like receptor (KIR) phosphorylation using a technique applicable to imaging phosphorylation of any green fluorescent protein–tagged receptor at an intercellular contact or immune synapse. Specifically, we use fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) to report Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) between GFP-tagged KIR2DL1 and a Cy3-tagged generic anti-phosphotyrosine monoclonal antibody. Visualization of KIR phosphorylation in natural killer (NK) cells contacting target cells expressing cognate major histocompatibility complex class I proteins revealed that inhibitory signaling is spatially restricted to the immune synapse. This explains how NK cells respond appropriately when simultaneously surveying susceptible and resistant target cells. More surprising, phosphorylated KIR was confined to microclusters within the aggregate of KIR, contrary to an expected homogeneous distribution of KIR signaling across the immune synapse. Also, yellow fluorescent protein–tagged Lck, a kinase important for KIR phosphorylation, accumulated in a multifocal distribution at inhibitory synapses. Spatial confinement of receptor phosphorylation within the immune synapse may be critical to how activating and inhibitory signals are integrated in NK cells.


Biophysical Journal | 2008

Multiplexed FRET to image multiple signaling events in live cells.

David M. Grant; Wei Zhang; Ewan J. McGhee; Tom D. Bunney; Clifford Talbot; Sunil Kumar; Ian Munro; Christopher Dunsby; Mark A. A. Neil; Matilda Katan; Paul M. W. French

We report what to our knowledge is a novel approach for simultaneous imaging of two different Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) sensors in the same cell with minimal spectral cross talk. Previous methods based on spectral ratiometric imaging of the two FRET sensors have been limited by the availability of suitably bright acceptors for the second FRET pair and the spectral cross talk incurred when measuring in four spectral windows. In contrast to spectral ratiometric imaging, fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) requires measurement of the donor fluorescence only and is independent of emission from the acceptor. By combining FLIM-FRET of the novel red-shifted TagRFP/mPlum FRET pair with spectral ratiometric imaging of an ECFP/Venus pair we were thus able to maximize the spectral separation between our chosen fluorophores while at the same time overcoming the low quantum yield of the far red acceptor mPlum. Using this technique, we could read out a TagRFP/mPlum intermolecular FRET sensor for reporting on small Ras GTP-ase activation in live cells after epidermal growth factor stimulation and an ECFP/Venus Cameleon FRET sensor for monitoring calcium transients within the same cells. The combination of spectral ratiometric imaging of ECFP/Venus and high-speed FLIM-FRET of TagRFP/mPlum can thus increase the spectral bandwidth available and provide robust imaging of multiple FRET sensors within the same cell. Furthermore, since FLIM does not require equal stoichiometries of donor and acceptor, this approach can be used to report on both unimolecular FRET biosensors and protein-protein interactions with the same cell.


Optics Express | 2008

Optically sectioned imaging by oblique plane microscopy

Christopher Dunsby

This paper describes a new optically sectioning microscopy technique based on oblique selective plane illumination combined with oblique imaging. This method differs from previous selective plane illumination techniques as the same high numerical aperture lens is used to both illuminate and image the specimen. Initial results obtained using fluorescent pollen grains are presented, together with a measurement of the resolution of the system and an analysis of the potential performance of future systems. Since only the plane of the specimen that is being imaged is illuminated, this technique is particularly suited to time-lapse 3-D imaging of sensitive biological systems where photobleaching and phototoxicity must be kept to a minimum, and it could also be applied to image microfluidic technology for lab-on-a-chip, cytometry and other applications.


Biomedical optics | 2003

Imaging of tumor necroses using full-frame optical coherence imaging

Ping Yu; Leilei Peng; M. Mustata; David D. Nolte; John J. Turek; M. R. Melloch; Christopher Dunsby; Y. Gu; Paul M. W. French

Holographic optical coherence imaging (OCI) has been used to acquire depth resolved images in tumor spheroids. OCI is a coherence-domain imaging technique that uses dynamic holography as the coherence gate. The technique is full-frame (en face) and background free, allowing real-time acquisition to a digital camera without motional reconstruction artifacts. We describe the method of operation of the holographic OCI on highly scattering specimens of tumor spheroids. Because of the sub-resolution structure in the sample, the holograms consist primarily of speckle fields. We present two kinds of volumetric data acquisition. One is uses fly-throughs with a stepping reference delay. Another is static holograms at a fixed reference delay with the coherence gate inside the tumor spheroids. At a fixed reference delay, the holograms consist of time-dependent speckle patterns. The method can be used to study cell motility inside tumor spheroids when metabolic or cross-linking poisons are delivered to the specimens.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2007

A hyperspectral fluorescence lifetime probe for skin cancer diagnosis

P. A. A. De Beule; Christopher Dunsby; Neil Galletly; Gordon Stamp; A. C. Chu; Uma Anand; Praveen Anand; Christopher D. Benham; A. Naylor; Paul M. W. French

The autofluorescence of biological tissue can be exploited for the detection and diagnosis of disease but, to date, its complex nature and relatively weak signal levels have impeded its widespread application in biology and medicine. We present here a portable instrument designed for the in situ simultaneous measurement of autofluorescence emission spectra and temporal decay profiles, permitting the analysis of complex fluorescence signals. This hyperspectral fluorescence lifetime probe utilizes two ultrafast lasers operating at 355 and 440 nm that can excite autofluorescence from many different biomolecules present in skin tissue including keratin, collagen, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate), and flavins. The instrument incorporates an optical fiber probe to provide sample illumination and fluorescence collection over a millimeter-sized area. We present a description of the system, including spectral and temporal characterizations, and report the preliminary application of this instrument to a study of recently resected (<2 h) ex vivo skin lesions, illustrating its potential for skin cancer detection and diagnosis.


IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging | 2015

3-D In Vitro Acoustic Super-Resolution and Super-Resolved Velocity Mapping Using Microbubbles

Kirsten Christensen-Jeffries; Jemma Brown; Paul Aljabar; Meng-Xing Tang; Christopher Dunsby; Robert J. Eckersley

The structure of microvasculature cannot be resolved using standard clinical ultrasound (US) imaging frequencies due to the fundamental diffraction limit of US waves. In this work, we use a standard clinical US system to perform in vivo sub-diffraction imaging on a CD1, female mouse aged eight weeks by localizing isolated US signals from microbubbles flowing within the ear microvasculature, and compare our results to optical microscopy. Furthermore, we develop a new technique to map blood velocity at super-resolution by tracking individual bubbles through the vasculature. Resolution is improved from a measured lateral and axial resolution of 112 μm and 94 μm respectively in original US data, to super-resolved images of microvasculature where vessel features as fine as 19 μm are clearly visualized. Velocity maps clearly distinguish opposing flow direction and separated speed distributions in adjacent vessels, thereby enabling further differentiation between vessels otherwise not spatially separated in the image. This technique overcomes the diffraction limit to provide a noninvasive means of imaging the microvasculature at super-resolution, to depths of many centimeters. In the future, this method could noninvasively image pathological or therapeutic changes in the microvasculature at centimeter depths in vivo.

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Ian Munro

Imperial College London

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Sean C. Warren

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Gordon Stamp

Francis Crick Institute

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Sunil Kumar

Imperial College London

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