Weiming Yu
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
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Featured researches published by Weiming Yu.
Biophysical Journal | 1997
Tiziana Parasassi; Enrico Gratton; Weiming Yu; Paul Wilson; Moshe Levi
Two-photon excitation microscopy shows coexisting regions of different generalized polarization (GP) in phospholipid vesicles, in red blood cells, in a renal tubular cell line, and in purified renal brushborder and basolateral membranes labeled with the fluorescent probe laurdan. The GP function measures the relative water content of the membrane. In the present study we discuss images obtained with polarized laser excitation, which selects different molecular orientations of the lipid bilayer corresponding to different spatial regions. The GP distribution in the gel-phase vesicles is relatively narrow, whereas the GP distribution in the liquid-crystalline phase vesicles (DOPC and DLPC) is broad. Analysis of images obtained with polarized excitation of the liquid-crystalline phase vesicles leads to the conclusion that coexisting regions of different GP must have dimensions smaller than the microscope resolution (approximately 200 nm radially and 600 nm axially). Vesicles of an equimolar mixture of DOPC and DPPC show coexisting rigid and fluid domains (high GP and low GP), but the rigid domains, which are preferentially excited by polarized light, have GP values lower than the pure gel-phase domains. Cholesterol strongly modifies the domain morphology. In the presence of 30 mol% cholesterol, the broad GP distribution of the DOPC/DPPC equimolar sample becomes narrower. The sample is still very heterogeneous, as demonstrated by the separations of GP disjoined regions, which are the result of photoselection of regions of different lipid orientation. In intact red blood cells, microscopic regions of different GP can be resolved, whereas in the renal cells GP domains have dimensions smaller than the microscope resolution. Preparations of renal apical brush border membranes and basolateral membranes show well-resolved GP domains, which may result from a different local orientation, or the domains may reflect a real heterogeneity of these membranes.
Bioimaging | 1995
Peter T. C. So; T. French; Weiming Yu; K. M. Berland; Chen Y. Dong; Enrico Gratton
We have developed a high sensitivity time-resolved two-photon scanning microscope. At an excitation wavelength of 960 nm, a spatial point spread function of 0.3 μm (FWHM) radially and 0.9 μm (FWHM) axially is measured for an 1.25 N.A. objective. The light source is a mode-locked titanium-sapphire laser. The time resolution is 400 ps with common chromophores used in microscopy. Time resolution is obtained using the frequency-domain heterodyning technique in which the laser is synchronized at a very high cross-correlation frequency to the rest of the electronics. We demonstrate spatial and time resolution using well-characterized fluorescent microspheres. We show two applications of two-photon time-resolved fluorescence microscopy: time-resolved imaging of multiple dye labeled cells and quantitative cellular calcium concentration using a lifetime indicator.
Biophysical Journal | 1996
Weiming Yu; Peter T. C. So; T. French; Enrico Gratton
We use the lipophilic fluorescence probe Laurdan to study cell membranes. The generalized polarization (GP) of Laurdan-labeled cells contains useful information about membrane fluidity and polarity. A high GP is usually associated with low fluidity, low polarity, or high cholesterol content of the membranes, and a low GP is the opposite. We have combined the GP method and two-photon fluorescence microscopy to provide an alternative approach to study cell membranes. Using two-photon excitation in a conventional microscope offers great advantages for studying biological samples. These advantages include efficient background rejection, low photodamage, and improved depth discrimination. We performed GP measurements on mouse fibroblast cells and observed that both intensity and GP images are not spatially uniform. We tested for possible GP artifacts arising from cellular autofluorescence and lifetime quenching, using a procedure for background fluorescence subtraction and by direct lifetime measurements in the microscope. GP measured in a single cell displays a broad distribution, and the GP of 40 different cells grown on the same cover glass is also statistically distributed. The correlations between intensity and GP images were analyzed, and no monotonic dependence between the two was found. By digitally separating high and low GP values, we found that high GP values often associate with the regions of the plasma membrane and low GP values link with the nuclear membranes. Our results also show local GP variations within the plasma and nuclear membranes.
Applied Physics Letters | 1999
Munir H. Nayfeh; Osman Akcakir; Joel Therrien; Zain Yamani; Nicholas P. Barry; Weiming Yu; Enrico Gratton
Porous silicon is excited using near-infrared femtosecond pulsed and continuous wave radiation at an average intensity of ∼106 W/cm2 (8×1010 W/cm2 peak intensity in pulsed mode). Our results demonstrate the presence of micron-size regions for which the intensity of the photoluminescence has a highly nonlinear threshold, rising by several orders of magnitude near this incident intensity for both the pulsed and continuous wave cases. These results are discussed in terms of stimulated emission from quantum confinement engineered intrinsic Si–Si radiative traps in ultrasmall nanocrystallites, populated following two-photon absorption.
Biopolymers | 2000
Caterina Arcangeli; Weiming Yu; Salvatore Cannistraro; Enrico Gratton
We combined two-photon fluorescence microscopy and spectroscopy to provide functional images of UV-B (280-315 nm) induced stress on an Antarctic fungus. Two-photon excitation microscopy was used to characterize the distribution of autofluorescence inside the spore and the hyphae of the fungus. The imaging analysis clearly shows that the autofluorescence response of spores is higher than that of hyphae. The imaging analysis at different depths shows that, strikingly enough, the spore autofluorescence originates from the cell wall and membrane fluorophores. The spectroscopic results show moreover that the fluorescence spectra of spores are redshifted upon UV-B irradiation. Tentative identification of the chromophores involved in the autofluorescence response and their biological relevance are also discussed on the basis of a previous steady-state fluorescence spectroscopic study performed on both whole spore suspension and organic-soluble extracts.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2000
Tiziana Parasassi; Weiming Yu; Diane M. Durbin; Liana Kuriashkina; Enrico Gratton; Nobuyo Maeda; Fulvio Ursini
IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine | 1999
Tiziana Parasassi; Enrico Gratton; H. Zajicek; Moshe Levi; Weiming Yu
Archive | 2002
Weiming Yu; William W. Mantulin; Enrico Gratton
Biophysical Journal | 1998
H Zajicek; Weiming Yu; Hong Wang; Enrico Gratton; Tiziana Parasassi; Moshe Levi
Archive | 2002
Tiziana Parasassi; L. Bagatolli; Enrico Gratton; M. Levi; Fulvio Ursini; Weiming Yu; K. Hubert; Zajicek