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Dive into the research topics where Mark B. Cannell is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark B. Cannell.


The Journal of Physiology | 1999

Properties of Ca2+ sparks evoked by action potentials in mouse ventricular myocytes

John H.B. Bridge; Philip R. Ershler; Mark B. Cannell

1 Calcium sparks were examined in enzymatically dissociated mouse cardiac ventricular cells using the calcium indicator fluo‐3 and confocal microscopy. The properties of the mouse cardiac calcium spark are generally similar to those reported for other species. 2 Examination of the temporal relationship between the action potential and the time course of calcium spark production showed that calcium sparks are more likely to occur during the initial repolarization phase of the action potential. The latency of their occurrence varied by less than 1·4 ms (s.d.) and this low variability may be explained by the interaction of the gating of L‐type calcium channels with the changes in driving force for calcium entry during the action potential. 3 When fixed sites within the cell are examined, calcium sparks have relatively constant amplitude but the amplitude of the sparks was variable among sites. The low variability of the amplitude of the calcium sparks suggests that more than one sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) release channel must be involved in their genesis. Noise analysis (with the assumption of independent gating) suggests that > 18 SR calcium release channels may be involved in the generation of the calcium spark. At a fixed site, the response is close to ‘all‐or‐none’ behaviour which suggests that calcium sparks are indeed elementary events underlying cardiac excitation‐contraction coupling. 4 A method for selecting spark sites for signal averaging is presented which allows the time course of the spark to be examined with high temporal and spatial resolution. Using this method we show the development of the calcium spark at high signal‐to‐noise levels.


The Journal of Physiology | 2001

Location of the initiation site of calcium transients and sparks in rabbit heart Purkinje cells

Jm Cordeiro; Kenneth W. Spitzer; Wayne R. Giles; Pe Ershler; Mark B. Cannell; Jhb Bridge

1 The distribution and localization of Ca2+ transients and Ca2+ sparks in isolated adult rabbit Purkinje cells were examined using confocal microscopy and the Ca2+ indicator fluo‐3. 2 When cells were field stimulated in 2.0 mm Ca2+ buffer, a transverse confocal line scan (500 Hz) showed that the fluorescence intensity was greatest at the cell periphery during the onset of the Ca2+ transient ([Ca2+]i). In contrast, the [Ca2+]i of ventricular cells showed a more uniform pattern of activation across the cell. Staining with di‐8‐ANEPPS revealed that Purkinje cells lack t‐tubules, whereas ventricular cells have an extensive t‐tubular system. 3 When we superfused both cell types with a buffer containing 5 mm Ca2+‐1 μm isoproterenol (isoprenaline) they produced Ca2+ sparks spontaneously. Ca2+ sparks occurred only at the periphery of Purkinje cells but occurred throughout ventricular cells. Sparks in both cell types could be completely abolished by addition of the SR inhibitor thapsigargin (500 nm). Brief exposure to nifedipine (10 μm) did not reduce the number of spontaneous sparks. 4 Immunofluorescence staining of Purkinje cells with anti‐ryanodine antibody revealed that ryanodine receptors (RyRs) are present at both peripheral and central locations. 5 Computer simulations of experiments in which the calcium transient was evoked by voltage clamp depolarizations suggested that the increase in calcium observed in the centre of the cell could be explained by simple buffered diffusion of calcium. These computations suggested that the RyRs deep within the cell do not contribute significantly to the calcium transient. 6 These results provide the first detailed, spatially resolved data describing Ca2+ transients and Ca2+ sparks in rabbit cardiac Purkinje cells. Both types of events are initiated only at subsarcolemmal SR Ca2+ release sites suggesting that in Purkinje cells, Ca2+ sparks only originate where the sarcolemma and sarcoplasmic reticulum form junctions. The role of the centrally located RyRs remains unclear. It is possible that because of the lack of t‐tubules these RyRs do not experience a sufficiently large Ca2+ trigger during excitation‐contraction (E‐C) coupling to become active.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Changes in the organization of excitation-contraction coupling structures in failing human heart

David J. Crossman; Peter R. Ruygrok; Christian Soeller; Mark B. Cannell

BACKGROUND The cardiac myocyte t-tubular system ensures rapid, uniform cell activation and several experimental lines of evidence suggest changes in the t-tubular system and associated excitation-contraction coupling proteins may occur in heart failure. METHODS AND RESULTS The organization of t-tubules, L-type calcium channels (DHPRs), ryanodine receptors (RyRs) and contractile machinery were examined in fixed ventricular tissue samples from both normal and failing hearts (idiopathic (non-ischemic) dilated cardiomyopathy) using high resolution fluorescent imaging. Wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), Na-Ca exchanger, DHPR and caveolin-3 labels revealed a shift from a predominantly transverse orientation to oblique and axial directions in failing myocytes. In failure, dilation of peripheral t-tubules occurred and a change in the extent of protein glycosylation was evident. There was no change in the fractional area occupied by myofilaments (labeled with phalloidin) but there was a small reduction in the number of RyR clusters per unit area. The general relationship between DHPRs and RyR was not changed and RyR labeling overlapped with 51±3% of DHPR labeling in normal hearts. In longitudinal (but not transverse) sections there was an ∼30% reduction in the degree of colocalization between DHPRs and RyRs as measured by Pearsons correlation coefficient in failing hearts. CONCLUSIONS The results show that extensive remodelling of the t-tubular network and associated excitation-contraction coupling proteins occurs in failing human heart. These changes may contribute to abnormal calcium handling in heart failure. The general organization of the t-system and changes observed in failure samples have subtle differences to some animal models although the general direction of changes are generally similar.


PLOS ONE | 2011

4D Super-Resolution Microscopy with Conventional Fluorophores and Single Wavelength Excitation in Optically Thick Cells and Tissues

David Baddeley; David J. Crossman; Sabrina Rossberger; Juliette E. Cheyne; Johanna M. Montgomery; Isuru D. Jayasinghe; Christoph Cremer; Mark B. Cannell; Christian Soeller

Background Optical super-resolution imaging of fluorescently stained biological samples is rapidly becoming an important tool to investigate protein distribution at the molecular scale. It is therefore important to develop practical super-resolution methods that allow capturing the full three-dimensional nature of biological systems and also can visualize multiple protein species in the same sample. Methodology/Principal Findings We show that the use of a combination of conventional near-infrared dyes, such as Alexa 647, Alexa 680 and Alexa 750, all excited with a 671 nm diode laser, enables 3D multi-colour super-resolution imaging of complex biological samples. Optically thick samples, including human tissue sections, cardiac rat myocytes and densely grown neuronal cultures were imaged with lateral resolutions of ∼15 nm (std. dev.) while reducing marker cross-talk to <1%. Using astigmatism an axial resolution of ∼65 nm (std. dev.) was routinely achieved. The number of marker species that can be distinguished depends on the mean photon number of single molecule events. With the typical photon yields from Alexa 680 of ∼2000 up to 5 markers may in principle be resolved with <2% crosstalk. Conclusions/Significance Our approach is based entirely on the use of conventional, commercially available markers and requires only a single laser. It provides a very straightforward way to investigate biological samples at the nanometre scale and should help establish practical 4D super-resolution microscopy as a routine research tool in many laboratories.


Biophysical Journal | 2009

Organization of Ryanodine Receptors, Transverse Tubules, and Sodium-Calcium Exchanger in Rat Myocytes

Isuru D. Jayasinghe; Mark B. Cannell; Christian Soeller

Confocal and total internal reflection fluorescence imaging was used to examine the distribution of caveolin-3, sodium-calcium exchange (NCX) and ryanodine receptors (RyRs) in rat ventricular myocytes. Transverse and longitudinal optical sectioning shows that NCX is distributed widely along the transverse and longitudinal tubular system (t-system). The NCX labeling consisted of both punctate and distributed components, which partially colocalize with RyRs (27%). Surface membrane labeling showed a similar pattern but the fraction of RyR clusters containing NCX label was decreased and no nonpunctate labeling was observed. Sixteen percent of RyRs were not colocalized with the t-system and 1.6% of RyRs were found on longitudinal elements of the t-system. The surface distribution of RyR labeling was not generally consistent with circular patches of RyRs. This suggests that previous estimates for the number of RyRs in a junction (based on circular close-packed arrays) need to be revised. The observed distribution of caveolin-3 labeling was consistent with its exclusion from RyR clusters. Distance maps for all colocalization pairs were calculated to give the distance between centroids of punctate labeling and edges for distributed components. The possible roles for punctate NCX labeling are discussed.


Biophysical Journal | 2009

Light-Induced Dark States of Organic Fluochromes Enable 30 nm Resolution Imaging in Standard Media

David Baddeley; Isuru D. Jayasinghe; Christoph Cremer; Mark B. Cannell; Christian Soeller

We show that high quantum efficiency fluorophores can exhibit reversible photobleaching. This observation provides the basis for an imaging technique we call reversible photobleaching microscopy. We demonstrate applicability of this technique using antibody labeled biological samples in standard aqueous (or glycerol based) media to produce far-field images at approximately 30 nm resolution. Our novel method relies on intense illumination to reversibly induce a very long-lived (>10 s) dark state from which single fluorochromes slowly return stochastically. As in other localization microscopy methods, reversible photobleaching microscopy localizes single fluorochromes, but has the advantage that specialized photoactivatible and photoswitchable molecules or special immersion/embedding media are not required.


Journal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility | 2006

Effect of changes in action potential spike configuration, junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum micro-architecture and altered t-tubule structure in human heart failure

Mark B. Cannell; David J. Crossman; Christian Soeller

Using a Monte–Carlo model of L-type Ca2+ channel (DHPR) gating, we have examined the effect of changes in the early time course of the action potential as seen in human heart failure on excitation contraction coupling. The time course of DHPR Ca2+ influx was coupled into a simple model of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release. Our model shows that the loss of the initial spike in human heart failure should reduce the synchrony of Ca2+ spark production and lead to the appearance of late Ca2+ sparks and greater non-uniformity of intracellular Ca2+. Within the junctional space of the cardiac dyad, a small increase in the mean distance of a DHPR from a RyR results in a marked decrease in the ability of the DHPR-mediated increase in local [Ca2+] concentration to activate RyRs. This suggests that the efficiency of EC coupling may be reduced if changes in micro-architecture develop and such effects have been noted in experimental models of heart failure. High resolution imaging of t-tubules in tachycardia-induced heart failure show deranged t-tubule structure. While in normal human hearts t-tubules run mainly in a radial direction, t-tubules in the heart failure samples were oriented more toward the long axis of the cell. In addition, t-tubules may become dilated and bifurcated. Our data suggest that changes in the micro-architecture of the cell and membrane structures associated with excitation–contraction coupling, combined with changes in early action potential configuration can reduce the efficiency by which Ca2+ influx via DHPRs can activate SR calcium release and cardiac contraction. While the underlying cause of these effects is unclear, our data suggest that geometric factors can play an important role in the pathophysilogy of the human heart in failure.


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2010

Visualization of localization microscopy data.

David Baddeley; Mark B. Cannell; Christian Soeller

Localization microscopy techniques based on localizing single fluorophore molecules now routinely achieve accuracies better than 30 nm. Unlike conventional optical microscopies, localization microscopy experiments do not generate an image but a list of discrete coordinates of estimated fluorophore positions. Data display and analysis therefore generally require visualization methods that translate the position data into conventional images. Here we investigate the properties of several widely used visualization techniques and show that a commonly used algorithm based on rendering Gaussians may lead to a 1.44-fold loss of resolution. Existing methods typically do not explicitly take sampling considerations into account and thus may produce spurious structures. We present two additional visualization algorithms, an adaptive histogram method based on quad-trees and a Delaunay triangulation based visualization of point data that address some of these deficiencies. The new visualization methods are designed to suppress erroneous detail in poorly sampled image areas but avoid loss of resolution in well-sampled regions. A number of criteria for scoring visualization methods are developed as a guide for choosing among visualization methods and are used to qualitatively compare various algorithms.


Biophysical Journal | 2002

Estimation of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release flux underlying Ca2+ sparks

Christian Soeller; Mark B. Cannell

Using a combination of experimental and numerical approaches, we have tested two different approaches to calculating the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release flux, which gives rise to cardiac muscle Ca2+ sparks. By using two-photon excited spot photolysis of DM-Nitrophen, known Ca2+ release flux time courses were generated to provide the first experimental validation of spark flux reconstruction algorithms. These artificial Ca2+ sparks show that it is possible to calculate the SR Ca2+ release waveform with reasonable accuracy, provided the flux equations reasonably reflect the properties of the experimental system. Within cardiac muscle cells, we show that Ca2+ flux reconstruction is complicated by the substantial dye binding to proteins, a factor that has not been adequately addressed in previous flux reconstruction algorithms. Furthermore, our numerical experiments suggest that the calculated time course of release flux inactivation based on conventional flux reconstruction algorithms is likely to be in error. We therefore developed novel algorithms based on an explicit dye binding scheme. When these algorithm were applied to evoked Ca2+ sparks in rat cardiac ventricular myocytes, the reconstructed Ca2+ release waveform peaked in ~5 ms and decayed with a halftime of approximately 5 ms. The peak flux magnitude was 7-12 pA, suggesting that sparks must arise from clusters of >15 ryanodine receptors.


Biophysical Journal | 2008

Novel Features of the Rabbit Transverse Tubular System Revealed by Quantitative Analysis of Three-Dimensional Reconstructions from Confocal Images

Eleonora Savio-Galimberti; Joy S. Frank; Masashi Inoue; Joshua I. Goldhaber; Mark B. Cannell; John H.B. Bridge; Frank B. Sachse

With scanning confocal microscopy we obtained three-dimensional (3D) reconstructions of the transverse tubular system (t-system) of rabbit ventricular cells. We accomplished this by labeling the t-system with dextran linked to fluorescein or, alternatively, wheat-germ agglutinin conjugated to an Alexa fluor dye. Image processing and visualization techniques allowed us to reconstruct the t-system in three dimensions. In a myocyte lying flat on a coverslip, t-tubules typically progressed from its upper and lower surfaces. 3D reconstructions of the t-tubules also suggested that some of them progressed from the sides of the cell. The analysis of single t-tubules revealed novel morphological features. The average diameter of single t-tubules from six cells was estimated to 448 +/- 172 nm (mean +/- SD, number of t-tubules 348, number of cross sections 5323). From reconstructions we were able to identify constrictions occurring every 1.87 +/- 1.09 microm along the principal axis of the tubule. The cross-sectional area of these constrictions was reduced to an average of 57.7 +/- 27.5% (number of constrictions 170) of the adjacent local maximal areas. Principal component analysis revealed flattening of t-tubular cross sections, confirming findings that we obtained from electron micrographs. Dextran- and wheat-germ agglutinin-associated signals were correlated in the t-system and are therefore equally good markers. The 3D structure of the t-system in rabbit ventricular myocytes seems to be less complex than that found in rat. Moreover, we found that t-tubules in rabbit have approximately twice the diameter of those in rat. We speculate that the constrictions (or regions between them) are sites of dyadic clefts and therefore can provide geometric markers for colocalizing dyadic proteins. In consideration of the resolution of the imaging system, we suggest that our methods permit us to obtain spatially resolved 3D reconstructions of the t-system in rabbit cells. We also propose that our methods allow us to characterize pathological defects of the t-system, e.g., its remodeling as a result of heart failure.

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