Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Leonardo Sacconi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Leonardo Sacconi.


Optics Express | 2012

Confocal light sheet microscopy: micron-scale neuroanatomy of the entire mouse brain

Ludovico Silvestri; Alessandro Bria; Leonardo Sacconi; Giulio Iannello; Francesco S. Pavone

Elucidating the neural pathways that underlie brain function is one of the greatest challenges in neuroscience. Light sheet based microscopy is a cutting edge method to map cerebral circuitry through optical sectioning of cleared mouse brains. However, the image contrast provided by this method is not sufficient to resolve and reconstruct the entire neuronal network. Here we combined the advantages of light sheet illumination and confocal slit detection to increase the image contrast in real time, with a frame rate of 10 Hz. In fact, in confocal light sheet microscopy (CLSM), the out-of-focus and scattered light is filtered out before detection, without multiple acquisitions or any post-processing of the acquired data. The background rejection capabilities of CLSM were validated in cleared mouse brains by comparison with a structured illumination approach. We show that CLSM allows reconstructing macroscopic brain volumes with sub-cellular resolution. We obtained a comprehensive map of Purkinje cells in the cerebellum of L7-GFP transgenic mice. Further, we were able to trace neuronal projections across brain of thy1-GFP-M transgenic mice. The whole-brain high-resolution fluorescence imaging assured by CLSM may represent a powerful tool to navigate the brain through neuronal pathways. Although this work is focused on brain imaging, the macro-scale high-resolution tomographies affordable with CLSM are ideally suited to explore, at micron-scale resolution, the anatomy of different specimens like murine organs, embryos or flies.


Current Biology | 2004

Positioning and Elongation of the Fission Yeast Spindle by Microtubule-Based Pushing

Iva M. Tolić-Nørrelykke; Leonardo Sacconi; Geneviève Thon; Francesco S. Pavone

In eukaryotic cells, proper position of the mitotic spindle is necessary for successful cell division and development. We explored the nature of forces governing the positioning and elongation of the mitotic spindle in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. We hypothesized that astral microtubules exert mechanical force on the S. pombe spindle and thus help align the spindle with the major axis of the cell. Microtubules were tagged with green fluorescent protein (GFP) and visualized by two-photon microscopy. Forces were inferred both from time-lapse imaging of mitotic cells and, more directly, from mechanical perturbations induced by laser dissection of the spindle and astral microtubules. We found that astral microtubules push on the spindle poles in S. pombe, in contrast to the pulling forces observed in a number of other cell types. Further, laser dissection of the spindle midzone induced spindle collapse inward. This offers direct evidence in support of the hypothesis that spindle elongation is driven by the sliding apart of antiparallel microtubules in the spindle midzone. Broken spindles recovered and mitosis completed as usual. We propose a model of spindle centering and elongation by microtubule-based pushing forces.


Optics Letters | 2003

Multiphoton multifocal microscopy exploiting a diffractive optical element

Leonardo Sacconi; E. Froner; Renzo Antolini; Mohammad R. Taghizadeh; A. Choudhury; Francesco S. Pavone

Multiphoton multifocal microscopy (MMM) usually has been achieved through a combination of galvo scanners with microlens arrays, with rotating disks of microlens arrays, and cascaded beam splitters with asynchronous rastering of scanning mirrors. Here we describe the achievement of a neat and compact MMM by use of a high-diffraction-efficiency diffractive-optic element that generates a multiple-spot grid of uniform intensity to achieve higher fidelity in imaging of live cells at adequate speeds.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2005

Combined intracellular three-dimensional imaging and selective nanosurgery by a nonlinear microscope.

Leonardo Sacconi; Iva M. Tolić-Nørrelykke; Renzo Antolini; Francesco S. Pavone

We use near-IR femtosecond laser pulses for a combination of microscopy and nanosurgery on fluorescently labeled structures within living cells. Three-dimensional reconstructions of microtubule structures tagged with green fluorescent protein (GFP) are made during different phases of the cell cycle. Further, the microtubules are dissected using the same laser beam but with a higher laser power than for microscopy. We establish the viability of this technique for the cells of a fission yeast, which is a common model to study the mechanics of cell division. We show that nanosurgery can be performed with submicrometer precision and without visible collateral damage to the cell. The energy is primarily absorbed by the GFP molecules, and not by other native structures in the cell. GFP is particularly suitable for multiphoton excitation, as its excitation wavelength near 900 nm is benign for most cellular structures. The ability to use GFP to label structures for destruction by multiphoton excitation may be a valuable tool in cell biology.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Palette of fluorinated voltage-sensitive hemicyanine dyes

Ping Yan; Corey D. Acker; Wen-Liang Zhou; Peter D. Lee; Christian Bollensdorff; Adrian Negrean; Jacopo Lotti; Leonardo Sacconi; Srdjan D. Antic; Peter Kohl; Huibert D. Mansvelder; Francesco S. Pavone; Leslie M. Loew

Optical recording of membrane potential permits spatially resolved measurement of electrical activity in subcellular regions of single cells, which would be inaccessible to electrodes, and imaging of spatiotemporal patterns of action potential propagation in excitable tissues, such as the brain or heart. However, the available voltage-sensitive dyes (VSDs) are not always spectrally compatible with newly available optical technologies for sensing or manipulating the physiological state of a system. Here, we describe a series of 19 fluorinated VSDs based on the hemicyanine class of chromophores. Strategic placement of the fluorine atoms on the chromophores can result in either blue or red shifts in the absorbance and emission spectra. The range of one-photon excitation wavelengths afforded by these new VSDs spans 440–670 nm; the two-photon excitation range is 900–1,340 nm. The emission of each VSD is shifted by at least 100 nm to the red of its one-photon excitation spectrum. The set of VSDs, thus, affords an extended toolkit for optical recording to match a broad range of experimental requirements. We show the sensitivity to voltage and the photostability of the new VSDs in a series of experimental preparations ranging in scale from single dendritic spines to whole heart. Among the advances shown in these applications are simultaneous recording of voltage and calcium in single dendritic spines and optical electrophysiology recordings using two-photon excitation above 1,100 nm.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Probing myosin structural conformation in vivo by second-harmonic generation microscopy

V. Nucciotti; Chiara Stringari; Leonardo Sacconi; Francesco Vanzi; Luca Fusi; Marco Linari; Gabriella Piazzesi; Vincenzo Lombardi; Francesco S. Pavone

Understanding of complex biological processes requires knowledge of molecular structures and measurement of their dynamics in vivo. The collective chemomechanical action of myosin molecules (the molecular motors) in the muscle sarcomere represents a paradigmatic example in this respect. Here, we describe a label-free imaging method sensitive to protein conformation in vivo. We employed the order-based contrast enhancement by second-harmonic generation (SHG) for the functional imaging of muscle cells. We found that SHG polarization anisotropy (SPA) measurements report on the structural state of the actomyosin motors, with significant sensitivity to the conformation of myosin. In fact, each physiological/biochemical state we probed (relaxed, rigor, isometric contraction) produced a distinct value of polarization anisotropy. Employing a full reconstruction of the contributing elementary SHG emitters in the actomyosin motor array at atomic scale, we provide a molecular interpretation of the SPA measurements in terms of myosin conformations. We applied this method to the discrimination between attached and detached myosin heads in an isometrically contracting intact fiber. Our observations indicate that isometrically contracting muscle sustains its tetanic force by steady-state commitment of 30% of myosin heads. Applying SPA and molecular structure modeling to the imaging of unstained living tissues provides the basis for a generation of imaging and diagnostic tools capable of probing molecular structures and dynamics in vivo.


Scientific Reports | 2015

A versatile clearing agent for multi-modal brain imaging

Irene Costantini; Jean Pierre Ghobril; Antonino Paolo Di Giovanna; Anna Letizia Allegra Mascaro; Ludovico Silvestri; Marie Caroline Müllenbroich; Leonardo Onofri; Valerio Conti; Francesco Vanzi; Leonardo Sacconi; Renzo Guerrini; Henry Markram; Giulio Iannello; Francesco S. Pavone

Extensive mapping of neuronal connections in the central nervous system requires high-throughput µm-scale imaging of large volumes. In recent years, different approaches have been developed to overcome the limitations due to tissue light scattering. These methods are generally developed to improve the performance of a specific imaging modality, thus limiting comprehensive neuroanatomical exploration by multi-modal optical techniques. Here, we introduce a versatile brain clearing agent (2,2′-thiodiethanol; TDE) suitable for various applications and imaging techniques. TDE is cost-efficient, water-soluble and low-viscous and, more importantly, it preserves fluorescence, is compatible with immunostaining and does not cause deformations at sub-cellular level. We demonstrate the effectiveness of this method in different applications: in fixed samples by imaging a whole mouse hippocampus with serial two-photon tomography; in combination with CLARITY by reconstructing an entire mouse brain with light sheet microscopy and in translational research by imaging immunostained human dysplastic brain tissue.


Current Biology | 2005

Nuclear and Division-Plane Positioning Revealed by Optical Micromanipulation

Iva M. Tolic´-Nørrelykke; Leonardo Sacconi; C. Stringari; Isabel Raabe; Francesco S. Pavone

The position of the division plane affects cell shape and size, as well as tissue organization. Cells of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe have a centrally placed nucleus and divide by fission at the cell center. Microtubules (MTs) are required for the central position of the nucleus. Genetic studies lead to the hypothesis that the position of the nucleus may determine the position of the division plane. Alternatively, the division plane may be positioned by the spindle or by morphogen gradients or reaction diffusion mechanisms. Here, we investigate the role of MTs in nuclear positioning and the role of the nucleus in division-plane positioning by displacing the nucleus with optical tweezers. A displaced nucleus returned to the cell center by MT pushing against the cell tips. Nuclear displacement during interphase or early prophase resulted in asymmetric cell division, whereas displacement during prometaphase resulted in symmetric division as in unmanipulated cells. These results suggest that the division plane is specified by the predividing nucleus. Because the yeast nucleus is centered by MTs during interphase but not in mitosis, we hypothesize that the establishment of the division plane at the beginning of mitosis is an optimal mechanism for accurate symmetric division in these cells.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

Lac repressor hinge flexibility and DNA looping: single molecule kinetics by tethered particle motion

Francesco Vanzi; Chiara Broggio; Leonardo Sacconi; Francesco S. Pavone

The tethered particle motion (TPM) allows the direct detection of activity of a variety of biomolecules at the single molecule level. First pioneered for RNA polymerase, it has recently been applied also to other enzymes. In this work we employ TPM for a systematic investigation of the kinetics of DNA looping by wild-type Lac repressor (wt-LacI) and by hinge mutants Q60G and Q60 + 1. We implement a novel method for TPM data analysis to reliably measure the kinetics of loop formation and disruption and to quantify the effects of the protein hinge flexibility and of DNA loop strain on such kinetics. We demonstrate that the flexibility of the protein hinge has a profound effect on the lifetime of the looped state. Our measurements also show that the DNA bending energy plays a minor role on loop disruption kinetics, while a strong effect is seen on the kinetics of loop formation. These observations substantiate the growing number of theoretical studies aimed at characterizing the effects of DNA flexibility, tension and torsion on the kinetics of protein binding and dissociation, strengthening the idea that these mechanical factors in vivo may play an important role in the modulation of gene expression regulation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Action potential propagation in transverse-axial tubular system is impaired in heart failure

Leonardo Sacconi; Cecilia Ferrantini; Jacopo Lotti; Raffaele Coppini; Ping Yan; Leslie M. Loew; Chiara Tesi; Elisabetta Cerbai; Corrado Poggesi; Francesco S. Pavone

The plasma membrane of cardiac myocytes presents complex invaginations known as the transverse-axial tubular system (TATS). Despite TATSs crucial role in excitation-contraction coupling and morphological alterations found in pathological settings, TATSs electrical activity has never been directly investigated in remodeled tubular networks. Here we develop an ultrafast random access multiphoton microscope that, in combination with a customly synthesized voltage-sensitive dye, is used to simultaneously measure action potentials (APs) at multiple sites within the sarcolemma with submillisecond temporal and submicrometer spatial resolution in real time. We find that the tight electrical coupling between different sarcolemmal domains is guaranteed only within an intact tubular system. In fact, acute detachment by osmotic shock of most tubules from the surface sarcolemma prevents AP propagation not only in the disconnected tubules, but also in some of the tubules that remain connected with the surface. This indicates that a structural disorganization of the tubular system worsens the electrical coupling between the TATS and the surface. The pathological implications of this finding are investigated in failing hearts. We find that AP propagation into the pathologically remodeled TATS frequently fails and may be followed by local spontaneous electrical activity. Our findings provide insight on the relationship between abnormal TATS and asynchronous calcium release, a major determinant of cardiac contractile dysfunction and arrhythmias.

Collaboration


Dive into the Leonardo Sacconi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ludovico Silvestri

European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Claudia Crocini

European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Irene Costantini

European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chiara Tesi

University of Florence

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge