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Dive into the research topics where Peter Kner is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Kner.


Science | 2008

Subdiffraction Multicolor Imaging of the Nuclear Periphery with 3D Structured Illumination Microscopy

Lothar Schermelleh; Peter M. Carlton; Sebastian Haase; Lin Shao; Lukman Winoto; Peter Kner; Brian Burke; M. Cristina Cardoso; David A. Agard; Mats G. L. Gustafsson; Heinrich Leonhardt; John W. Sedat

Fluorescence light microscopy allows multicolor visualization of cellular components with high specificity, but its utility has until recently been constrained by the intrinsic limit of spatial resolution. We applied three-dimensional structured illumination microscopy (3D-SIM) to circumvent this limit and to study the mammalian nucleus. By simultaneously imaging chromatin, nuclear lamina, and the nuclear pore complex (NPC), we observed several features that escape detection by conventional microscopy. We could resolve single NPCs that colocalized with channels in the lamin network and peripheral heterochromatin. We could differentially localize distinct NPC components and detect double-layered invaginations of the nuclear envelope in prophase as previously seen only by electron microscopy. Multicolor 3D-SIM opens new and facile possibilities to analyze subcellular structures beyond the diffraction limit of the emitted light.


Nature Methods | 2009

Super-resolution video microscopy of live cells by structured illumination

Peter Kner; Bryant B Chhun; Eric R Griffis; Lukman Winoto; Mats G. L. Gustafsson

Structured-illumination microscopy can double the resolution of the widefield fluorescence microscope but has previously been too slow for dynamic live imaging. Here we demonstrate a high-speed structured-illumination microscope that is capable of 100-nm resolution at frame rates up to 11 Hz for several hundred time points. We demonstrate the microscope by video imaging of tubulin and kinesin dynamics in living Drosophila melanogaster S2 cells in the total internal reflection mode.


Nature Methods | 2011

Super-resolution 3D microscopy of live whole cells using structured illumination

Lin Shao; Peter Kner; E. Hesper Rego; Mats G. L. Gustafsson

Three-dimensional (3D) structured-illumination microscopy (SIM) can double the lateral and axial resolution of a wide-field fluorescence microscope but has been too slow for live imaging. Here we apply 3D SIM to living samples and record whole cells at up to 5 s per volume for >50 time points with 120-nm lateral and 360-nm axial resolution. We demonstrate the technique by imaging microtubules in S2 cells and mitochondria in HeLa cells.


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

Fast live simultaneous multiwavelength four-dimensional optical microscopy.

Peter M. Carlton; Jérôme Boulanger; Charles Kervrann; Jean-Baptiste Sibarita; Jean Salamero; Susannah Gordon-Messer; Debra A. Bressan; James E. Haber; Sebastian Haase; Lin Shao; Lukman Winoto; Atsushi Matsuda; Peter Kner; Satoru Uzawa; Mats G. L. Gustafsson; Zvi Kam; David A. Agard; John W. Sedat

Live fluorescence microscopy has the unique capability to probe dynamic processes, linking molecular components and their localization with function. A key goal of microscopy is to increase spatial and temporal resolution while simultaneously permitting identification of multiple specific components. We demonstrate a new microscope platform, OMX, that enables subsecond, multicolor four-dimensional data acquisition and also provides access to subdiffraction structured illumination imaging. Using this platform to image chromosome movement during a complete yeast cell cycle at one 3D image stack per second reveals an unexpected degree of photosensitivity of fluorophore-containing cells. To avoid perturbation of cell division, excitation levels had to be attenuated between 100 and 10,000× below the level normally used for imaging. We show that an image denoising algorithm that exploits redundancy in the image sequence over space and time allows recovery of biological information from the low light level noisy images while maintaining full cell viability with no fading.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2015

Tubulin transport by IFT is upregulated during ciliary growth by a cilium-autonomous mechanism

Julie M. Craft; J. Aaron Harris; Sebastian Hyman; Peter Kner; Karl F. Lechtreck

In Chlamydomonas cilia, IFT concentrates soluble tubulin by regulating IFT train occupancy and thereby promotes elongation of axonemal microtubules.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Condensed mitotic chromosome structure at nanometer resolution using PALM and EGFP- histones.

Atsushi Matsuda; Lin Shao; Jérôme Boulanger; Charles Kervrann; Peter M. Carlton; Peter Kner; David A. Agard; John W. Sedat

Photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) and related fluorescent biological imaging methods are capable of providing very high spatial resolutions (up to 20 nm). Two major demands limit its widespread use on biological samples: requirements for photoactivatable/photoconvertible fluorescent molecules, which are sometimes difficult to incorporate, and high background signals from autofluorescence or fluorophores in adjacent focal planes in three-dimensional imaging which reduces PALM resolution significantly. We present here a high-resolution PALM method utilizing conventional EGFP as the photoconvertible fluorophore, improved algorithms to deal with high levels of biological background noise, and apply this to imaging higher order chromatin structure. We found that the emission wavelength of EGFP is efficiently converted from green to red when exposed to blue light in the presence of reduced riboflavin. The photon yield of red-converted EGFP using riboflavin is comparable to other bright photoconvertible fluorescent proteins that allow <20 nm resolution. We further found that image pre-processing using a combination of denoising and deconvolution of the raw PALM images substantially improved the spatial resolution of the reconstruction from noisy images. Performing PALM on Drosophila mitotic chromosomes labeled with H2AvD-EGFP, a histone H2A variant, revealed filamentous components of ∼70 nm. This is the first observation of fine chromatin filaments specific for one histone variant at a resolution approximating that of conventional electron microscope images (10–30 nm). As demonstrated by modeling and experiments on a challenging specimen, the techniques described here facilitate super-resolution fluorescent imaging with common biological samples.


quantum electronics and laser science conference | 1997

Magnetically Enhanced Exciton-exciton Correlations In Semiconductors

Peter Kner; S. Bar-Ad; M.V. Marquezini; D. S. Chemla; W. Schäfer

We present investigations of fs time resolved coherent wave mixing under high magnetic field. Our experiments reveal a new regime at high magnetic field and low excitation density dominated by the Coulomb interaction. This regime is inconsistent with the semiconductor Bloch equations. A model which includes exciton-exciton correlation successfully describes many features of this regime. {copyright} {ital 1997} {ital The American Physical Society}


Optics Express | 2010

Wavefront aberration measurements and corrections through thick tissue using fluorescent microsphere reference beacons

Oscar Azucena; Justin Crest; Jian Cao; William Sullivan; Peter Kner; Donald Gavel; Daren Dillon; Scot S. Olivier; Joel Kubby

We present a new method to directly measure and correct the aberrations introduced when imaging through thick biological tissue. A Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor is used to directly measure the wavefront error induced by a Drosophila embryo. The wavefront measurements are taken by seeding the embryo with fluorescent microspheres used as “artificial guide-stars.” The wavefront error is corrected in ten millisecond steps by applying the inverse to the wavefront error on a micro-electro-mechanical deformable mirror in the image path of the microscope. The results show that this new approach is capable of improving the Strehl ratio by 2 times on average and as high as 10 times when imaging through 100 μm of tissue. The results also show that the isoplanatic half-width is approximately 19 μm resulting in a corrected field of view 38 μm in diameter around the guide-star.


Journal of Microscopy | 2010

High-resolution wide-field microscopy with adaptive optics for spherical aberration correction and motionless focusing.

Peter Kner; John W. Sedat; David A. Agard; Zvi Kam

Live imaging in cell biology requires three‐dimensional data acquisition with the best resolution and signal‐to‐noise ratio possible. Depth aberrations are a major source of image degradation in three‐dimensional microscopy, causing a significant loss of resolution and intensity deep into the sample. These aberrations occur because of the mismatch between the sample refractive index and the immersion medium index. We have built a wide‐field fluorescence microscope that incorporates a large‐throw deformable mirror to simultaneously focus and correct for depth aberration in three‐dimensional imaging. Imaging fluorescent beads in water and glycerol with an oil immersion lens we demonstrate a corrected point spread function and a 2‐fold improvement in signal intensity. We apply this new microscope to imaging biological samples, and show sharper images and improved deconvolution.


quantum electronics and laser science conference | 1997

Quantum Confined Fano Interference

S. Bar-Ad; Peter Kner; M.V. Marquezini; D. S. Chemla; Shaul Mukamel

Quantum size effects have been thoroughly investigated since advances in material synthesis made possible the growth of semiconductor heterostructures with atomic monolayer accuracy. They become apparent in a physical phenomenon when at least one dimension of the sample becomes comparable to or smaller than the length scale that governs the quantum mechanics of that phenomenon. In the optical domain the exciton Bohr radius ao is usually the relevant length scale, and quantum confinement dominates the optical properties of semiconductor structures of size L # ao [1,2]. In the case of transport the carrier de Broglie wavelength lB determines the length scale at which quantum transport effects are observed [3]. In this Letter we present a new example of quantum size effects, apparent in the line shape of an optical resonance

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D. S. Chemla

University of California

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David A. Agard

University of California

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John W. Sedat

University of California

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S. Bar-Ad

University of California

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Lukman Winoto

University of California

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Wupen Yuen

University of California

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Zvi Kam

University of California

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