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Dive into the research topics where Peter O’Toole is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter O’Toole.


Ultramicroscopy | 2014

Correlative and integrated light and electron microscopy of in-resin GFP fluorescence, used to localise diacylglycerol in mammalian cells

Christopher J. Peddie; Ken Blight; Emma Wilson; Charlotte Melia; Jo Marrison; Raffaella Carzaniga; Marie-Charlotte Domart; Peter O’Toole; Banafshé Larijani; Lucy M. Collinson

Fluorescence microscopy of GFP-tagged proteins is a fundamental tool in cell biology, but without seeing the structure of the surrounding cellular space, functional information can be lost. Here we present a protocol that preserves GFP and mCherry fluorescence in mammalian cells embedded in resin with electron contrast to reveal cellular ultrastructure. Ultrathin in-resin fluorescence (IRF) sections were imaged simultaneously for fluorescence and electron signals in an integrated light and scanning electron microscope. We show, for the first time, that GFP is stable and active in resin sections in vacuo. We applied our protocol to study the subcellular localisation of diacylglycerol (DAG), a modulator of membrane morphology and membrane dynamics in nuclear envelope assembly. We show that DAG is localised to the nuclear envelope, nucleoplasmic reticulum and curved tips of the Golgi apparatus. With these developments, we demonstrate that integrated imaging is maturing into a powerful tool for accurate molecular localisation to structure.


Journal of Microscopy | 2013

Visualization and characterization of engineered nanoparticles in complex environmental and food matrices using atmospheric scanning electron microscopy

P. Luo; Ian E. G. Morrison; A. Dudkiewicz; K. Tiede; Edward D. Boyes; Peter O’Toole; S. Park; Alistair B.A. Boxall

Imaging and characterization of engineered nanoparticles (ENPs) in water, soils, sediment and food matrices is very important for research into the risks of ENPs to consumers and the environment. However, these analyses pose a significant challenge as most existing techniques require some form of sample manipulation prior to imaging and characterization, which can result in changes in the ENPs in a sample and in the introduction of analytical artefacts. This study therefore explored the application of a newly designed instrument, the atmospheric scanning electron microscope (ASEM), which allows the direct characterization of ENPs in liquid matrices and which therefore overcomes some of the limitations associated with existing imaging methods. ASEM was used to characterize the size distribution of a range of ENPs in a selection of environmental and food matrices, including supernatant of natural sediment, test medium used in ecotoxicology studies, bovine serum albumin and tomato soup under atmospheric conditions. The obtained imaging results were compared to results obtained using conventional imaging by transmission electron microscope (TEM) and SEM as well as to size distribution data derived from nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA). ASEM analysis was found to be a complementary technique to existing methods that is able to visualize ENPs in complex liquid matrices and to provide ENP size information without extensive sample preparation. ASEM images can detect ENPs in liquids down to 30 nm and to a level of 1 mg L−1 (9×108 particles mL−1, 50 nm Au ENPs). The results indicate ASEM is a highly complementary method to existing approaches for analyzing ENPs in complex media and that its use will allow those studying to study ENP behavior in situ, something that is currently extremely challenging to do.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014

Clearing Up the Signal: Spectral Imaging and Linear Unmixing in Fluorescence Microscopy

Timo Zimmermann; Joanne L. Marrison; Karen G. Hogg; Peter O’Toole

The ongoing progress in fluorescence labeling and in microscope instrumentation allows the generation and the imaging of complex biological samples that contain increasing numbers of fluorophores. For the correct quantitative analysis of datasets with multiple fluorescence channels, it is essential that the signals of the different fluorophores are reliably separated. Due to the width of fluorescence spectra, this cannot always be achieved using the fluorescence filters in the microscope. In such cases spectral imaging of the fluorescence data and subsequent linear unmixing allows the separation even of highly overlapping fluorophores into pure signals. In this chapter, the problems of fluorescence cross talk are defined, the concept of spectral imaging and separation by linear unmixing is described, and an overview of the microscope types suitable for spectral imaging are given.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Label-free imaging to study phenotypic behavioural traits of cells in complex co-cultures.

Rakesh Suman; Gabrielle Smith; Kathryn E. A. Hazel; Richard Kasprowicz; Mark Coles; Peter O’Toole; Sangeeta Chawla

Time-lapse imaging is a fundamental tool for studying cellular behaviours, however studies of primary cells in complex co-culture environments often requires fluorescent labelling and significant light exposure that can perturb their natural function over time. Here, we describe ptychographic phase imaging that permits prolonged label-free time-lapse imaging of microglia in the presence of neurons and astrocytes, which better resembles in vivo microenvironments. We demonstrate the use of ptychography as an assay to study the phenotypic behaviour of microglial cells in primary neuronal co-cultures through the addition of cyclosporine A, a potent immune-modulator.


Methods in Cell Biology | 2012

Atmospheric scanning electron microscope for correlative microscopy.

Ian E. G. Morrison; Clare L. Dennison; Hidetoshi Nishiyama; Mitsuo Suga; Chikara Sato; Andrew Yarwood; Peter O’Toole

The JEOL ClairScope is the first truly correlative scanning electron and optical microscope. An inverted scanning electron microscope (SEM) column allows electron images of wet samples to be obtained in ambient conditions in a biological culture dish, via a silicon nitride film window in the base. A standard inverted optical microscope positioned above the dish holder can be used to take reflected light and epifluorescence images of the same sample, under atmospheric conditions that permit biochemical modifications. For SEM, the open dish allows successive staining operations to be performed without moving the holder. The standard optical color camera used for fluorescence imaging can be exchanged for a high-sensitivity monochrome camera to detect low-intensity fluorescence signals, and also cathodoluminescence emission from nanophosphor particles. If these particles are applied to the sample at a suitable density, they can greatly assist the task of perfecting the correlation between the optical and electron images.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2017

Characterising live cell behaviour: Traditional label-free and quantitative phase imaging approaches

Richard Kasprowicz; Rakesh Suman; Peter O’Toole

Label-free imaging uses inherent contrast mechanisms within cells to create image contrast without introducing dyes/labels, which may confound results. Quantitative phase imaging is label-free and offers higher content and contrast compared to traditional techniques. High-contrast images facilitate generation of individual cell metrics via more robust segmentation and tracking, enabling formation of a label-free dynamic phenotype describing cell-to-cell heterogeneity and temporal changes. Compared to population-level averages, individual cell-level dynamic phenotypes have greater power to differentiate between cellular responses to treatments, which has clinical relevance e.g. in the treatment of cancer. Furthermore, as the data is obtained label-free, the same cells can be used for further assays or expansion, of potential benefit for the fields of regenerative and personalised medicine.


Journal of Microscopy | 2009

Exploiting advances in imaging technology to study biofilms by applying multiphoton laser scanning microscopy as an imaging and manipulation tool

M.A. Lakins; J.L. Marrison; Peter O’Toole; M.W. Van Der Woude

Biofilms are an important element of the natural ecosystems but can be detrimental in health care and industrial settings. To improve our ability to combat biofilms, we need to understand the processes that facilitate their formation and dispersal. One approach that has proven to be invaluable is to image biofilms as they grow. Here we describe tools and protocols to visualize biofilms with multiphoton laser scanning microscopy, compare this with single photon laser scanning confocal microscopy and highlight best working procedures. Furthermore, we describe how with multiphoton laser scanning microscopy the laser can be used to manipulate the biofilm, specifically to achieve localized bleaching, killing or ablation within the biofilm biomass. These applications open novel ways to study the dynamics of biofilm formation, regeneration and dispersal.


Proteome Science | 2014

Proteomic analysis of laser capture microscopy purified myotendinous junction regions from muscle sections

Tugba Can; Laura Faas; David A. Ashford; Adam A. Dowle; Jerry Thomas; Peter O’Toole; Gonzalo Blanco

The myotendinous junction is a specialized structure of the muscle fibre enriched in mechanosensing complexes, including costameric proteins and core elements of the z-disc. Here, laser capture microdissection was applied to purify membrane regions from the myotendinous junctions of mouse skeletal muscles, which were then processed for proteomic analysis. Sarcolemma sections from the longitudinal axis of the muscle fibre were used as control for the specificity of the junctional preparation. Gene ontology term analysis of the combined lists indicated a statistically significant enrichment in membrane-associated proteins. The myotendinous junction preparation contained previously uncharacterized proteins, a number of z-disc costameric ligands (e.g., actinins, capZ, αB cristallin, filamin C, cypher, calsarcin, desmin, FHL1, telethonin, nebulin, titin and an enigma-like protein) and other proposed players of sarcomeric stretch sensing and signalling, such as myotilin and the three myomesin homologs. A subset were confirmed by immunofluorescence analysis as enriched at the myotendinous junction, suggesting that laser capture microdissection from muscle sections is a valid approach to identify novel myotendinous junction players potentially involved in mechanotransduction pathways.


Methods | 2015

Quantification of proteins by flow cytometry: Quantification of human hepatic transporter P-gp and OATP1B1 using flow cytometry and mass spectrometry.

Karen G. Hogg; Jerry Thomas; David A. Ashford; Jared Cartwright; Ruth Coldwell; Daniel J. Weston; John Pillmoor; Dominic Surry; Peter O’Toole

Flow cytometry is a powerful tool for the quantitation of fluorescence and is proven to be able to correlate the fluorescence intensity to the number of protein on cells surface. Mass spectroscopy can also be used to determine the number of proteins per cell. Here we have developed two methods, using flow cytometry and mass spectroscopy to quantify number of transporters in human cells. These two approaches were then used to analyse the same samples so that a direct comparison could be made. Transporters have a major impact on the behaviour of a diverse number of drugs in human systems. While active uptake studies by transmembrane protein transporters using model substrates are routinely undertaken in human cell lines and hepatocytes as part of drug discovery and development, the interpretation of these results is currently limited by the inability to quantify the number of transporters present in the test samples. Here we provide a flow cytometric method for accurate quantification of transporter levels both on the cell surface and within the cell, and compare this to a quantitative mass spectrometric approach. Two transporters were selected for the study: OATP1B1 (also known as SLCO1B1, LST-1, OATP-C, OATP2) due to its important role in hepatic drug uptake and elimination; P-gp (also known as P-glycoprotein, MDR1, ABCB1) as a well characterised system and due to its potential impact on oral bioavailability, biliary and renal clearance, and brain penetration of drugs that are substrates for this transporter. In all cases the mass spectrometric method gave higher levels than the flow cytometry method. However, the two methods showed very similar trends in the relative ratios of both transporters in the hepatocyte samples investigated. The P-gp antibody allowed quantitative discrimination between externally facing transporters located in the cytoplasmic membrane and the total number of transporters on and in the cell. The proportion of externally facing transporter varied considerably in the four hepatocyte samples analysed, ranging from only 6% to 35% of intact and viable cells. The sample with only 6% externally facing transporter was further analysed by confocal microscopy which qualitatively confirmed the low level of transporter in the membrane and the large internal population. Here we prove that flow cytometry is an important tool for future protein analysis as it can not only quantify the number of proteins that a cell express but also identify the number of proteins on the surface and it is easy to apply for routine assays.


Scientific Reports | 2018

A correlative and quantitative imaging approach enabling characterization of primary cell-cell communication: Case of human CD4 + T cell-macrophage immunological synapses

Richard Kasprowicz; Emma Rand; Peter O’Toole; Nathalie Signoret

Cell-to-cell communication engages signaling and spatiotemporal reorganization events driven by highly context-dependent and dynamic intercellular interactions, which are difficult to capture within heterogeneous primary cell cultures. Here, we present a straightforward correlative imaging approach utilizing commonly available instrumentation to sample large numbers of cell-cell interaction events, allowing qualitative and quantitative characterization of rare functioning cell-conjugates based on calcium signals. We applied this approach to examine a previously uncharacterized immunological synapse, investigating autologous human blood CD4+ T cells and monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs) forming functional conjugates in vitro. Populations of signaling conjugates were visualized, tracked and analyzed by combining live imaging, calcium recording and multivariate statistical analysis. Correlative immunofluorescence was added to quantify endogenous molecular recruitments at the cell-cell junction. By analyzing a large number of rare conjugates, we were able to define calcium signatures associated with different states of CD4+ T cell-MDM interactions. Quantitative image analysis of immunostained conjugates detected the propensity of endogenous T cell surface markers and intracellular organelles to polarize towards cell-cell junctions with high and sustained calcium signaling profiles, hence defining immunological synapses. Overall, we developed a broadly applicable approach enabling detailed single cell- and population-based investigations of rare cell-cell communication events with primary cells.

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