22 results on '"Spahn, Christoph"'
Search Results
2. DeepBacs for multi-task bacterial image analysis using open-source deep learning approaches
- Author
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Spahn, Christoph, Gómez-de-Mariscal, Estibaliz, Laine, Romain F., Pereira, Pedro M., von Chamier, Lucas, Conduit, Mia, Pinho, Mariana G., Jacquemet, Guillaume, Holden, Séamus, Heilemann, Mike, and Henriques, Ricardo
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- 2022
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3. Nanoscale organization of the MHC I peptide-loading complex in human dendritic cells
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Koller, Nicole, Höllthaler, Philipp, Barends, Martina, Döring, Marius, Spahn, Christoph, Durán, Verónica, Costa, Bibiana, Becker, Jennifer, Heilemann, Mike, Kalinke, Ulrich, and Tampé, Robert
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- 2022
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4. Democratising deep learning for microscopy with ZeroCostDL4Mic
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von Chamier, Lucas, Laine, Romain F., Jukkala, Johanna, Spahn, Christoph, Krentzel, Daniel, Nehme, Elias, Lerche, Martina, Hernández-Pérez, Sara, Mattila, Pieta K., Karinou, Eleni, Holden, Séamus, Solak, Ahmet Can, Krull, Alexander, Buchholz, Tim-Oliver, Jones, Martin L., Royer, Loïc A., Leterrier, Christophe, Shechtman, Yoav, Jug, Florian, Heilemann, Mike, Jacquemet, Guillaume, and Henriques, Ricardo
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- 2021
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5. A toolbox for multiplexed super-resolution imaging of the E. coli nucleoid and membrane using novel PAINT labels
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Spahn, Christoph K., Glaesmann, Mathilda, Grimm, Jonathan B., Ayala, Anthony X., Lavis, Luke D., and Heilemann, Mike
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- 2018
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6. BACE-1 is expressed in the blood–brain barrier endothelium and is upregulated in a murine model of Alzheimer’s disease
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Devraj, Kavi, Poznanovic, Slobodan, Spahn, Christoph, Schwall, Gerhard, Harter, Patrick N, Mittelbronn, Michel, Antoniello, Katia, Paganetti, Paolo, Muhs, Andreas, Heilemann, Mike, Hawkins, Richard A, Schrattenholz, André, and Liebner, Stefan
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- 2016
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7. Multi-color, bleaching-resistant super-resolution optical fluctuation imaging with oligonucleotide-based exchangeable fluorophores
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Glogger, Marius, Spahn, Christoph, Enderlein, Jörg, and Heilemann, Mike
- Subjects
ddc:540 - Abstract
Super-resolution optical fluctuation imaging (SOFI) is a super-resolution microscopy technique that overcomes the diffraction limit by analyzing intensity fluctuations of statistically independent emitters in a time series of images. The final images are background-free and show confocality and enhanced spatial resolution (super-resolution). Fluorophore photobleaching, however, is a key limitation for recording long time series of images that will allow for the calculation of higher order SOFI results with correspondingly increased resolution. Here, we demonstrate that photobleaching can be circumvented by using fluorophore labels that reversibly and transiently bind to a target, and which are being replenished from a buffer which serves as a reservoir. Using fluorophore-labeled short DNA oligonucleotides, we labeled cellular structures with target-specific antibodies that contain complementary DNA sequences and record the fluctuation events caused by transient emitter binding. We show that this concept bypasses extensive photobleaching and facilitates two-color imaging of cellular structures with SOFI.
- Published
- 2020
8. Protein-specific, multicolor and 3D STED imaging in cells with DNA-labeled antibodies
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Spahn, Christoph Klaus, Hurter, Florian, Glaesmann, Mathilda, Karathanasis, Christos, Lampe, Marko, and Heilemann, Mike
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ddc:570 ,ddc:540 - Abstract
Photobleaching is a major challenge in fluorescence microscopy, in particular if high excitation light intensities are used. Signal-to-noise and spatial resolution may be compromised, which limits the amount of information that can be extracted from an image. Photobleaching can be bypassed by using exchangeable labels, which transiently bind to and dissociate from a target, thereby replenishing the destroyed labels with intact ones from a reservoir. Here, we demonstrate confocal and STED microscopy with short, fluorophore-labeled oligonucleotides that transiently bind to complementary oligonucleotides attached to protein-specific antibodies. The constant exchange of fluorophore labels in DNA-based STED imaging bypasses photobleaching that occurs with covalent labels. We show that this concept is suitable for targeted, two-color STED imaging of whole cells.
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- 2019
9. Click chemistry facilitates direct labelling and super-resolution imaging of nucleic acids and proteins† †Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c4ra01027b Click here for additional data file
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Raulf, Anika, Spahn, Christoph K., Zessin, Patrick J. M., Finan, Kieran, Bernhardt, Stefan, Heckel, Alexander, and Heilemann, Mike
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Chemistry ,parasitic diseases ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,natural sciences - Abstract
We demonstrate super-resolution imaging of proteins and nucleic acids that were densely labelled with fluorophores using the concept of “click chemistry”., We demonstrate high-density labelling of cellular DNA and RNA using click chemistry and perform confocal and super-resolution microscopy. We visualize the crescent and ring-like structure of densely packed RNA in nucleoli. We further demonstrate click chemistry with unnatural amino acids for super-resolution imaging of outer-membrane proteins of E. coli.
- Published
- 2014
10. The Pearling Transition Provides Evidence of Force-Driven Endosomal Tubulation during Salmonella Infection
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Gao, Yunfeng, primary, Spahn, Christoph, additional, Heilemann, Mike, additional, and Kenney, Linda J., additional
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- 2018
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11. Bleaching-independent, whole-cell, 3D and multi-color STED imaging with exchangeable fluorophores
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Spahn, Christoph Klaus, Grimm, Jonathan B., Lavis, Luke D., Lampe, Marko, Heilemann, Mike, Spahn, Christoph Klaus, Grimm, Jonathan B., Lavis, Luke D., Lampe, Marko, and Heilemann, Mike
- Abstract
We demonstrate bleaching-independent STED microscopy using fluorogenic labels that reversibly bind to their target structure. A constant exchange of labels guarantees the removal of photobleached fluorophores and their replacement by intact fluorophores, thereby circumventing bleaching-related limitations of STED super-resolution imaging in fixed and living cells. Foremost, we achieve a constant labeling density and demonstrate a fluorescence signal for long and theoretically unlimited acquisition times. Using this concept, we demonstrate whole-cell, 3D, multi-color and live cell STED microscopy with up to 100 min acquisition time.
- Published
- 2018
12. A toolbox for multiplexed super-resolution imaging of the E. coli nucleoid and membrane using novel PAINT labels
- Author
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Spahn, Christoph Klaus, Glaesmann, Mathilda, Grimm, Jonathan B., Ayala, Anthony X., Lavis, Luke D., Heilemann, Mike, Spahn, Christoph Klaus, Glaesmann, Mathilda, Grimm, Jonathan B., Ayala, Anthony X., Lavis, Luke D., and Heilemann, Mike
- Abstract
Maintenance of the bacterial homeostasis initially emanates from interactions between proteins and the bacterial nucleoid. Investigating their spatial correlation requires high spatial resolution, especially in tiny, highly confined and crowded bacterial cells. Here, we present super-resolution microscopy using a palette of fluorescent labels that bind transiently to either the membrane or the nucleoid of fixed E. coli cells. The presented labels are easily applicable, versatile and allow long-term single-molecule super-resolution imaging independent of photobleaching. The different spectral properties allow for multiplexed imaging in combination with other localisation-based super-resolution imaging techniques. As examples for applications, we demonstrate correlated super-resolution imaging of the bacterial nucleoid with the position of genetic loci, of nascent DNA in correlation to the entire nucleoid, and of the nucleoid of metabolically arrested cells. We furthermore show that DNA- and membrane-targeting labels can be combined with photoactivatable fluorescent proteins and visualise the nano-scale distribution of RNA polymerase relative to the nucleoid in drug-treated E. coli cells.
- Published
- 2018
13. The pearling transition provides evidence of force-driven endosomal tubulation during Salmonella infection
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Msadek, Tarek, Gao, Yunfeng, Spahn, Christoph Klaus, Heilemann, Mike, Kenney, Linda J., Msadek, Tarek, Gao, Yunfeng, Spahn, Christoph Klaus, Heilemann, Mike, and Kenney, Linda J.
- Abstract
Bacterial pathogens exploit eukaryotic pathways for their own end. Upon ingestion, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium passes through the stomach and then catalyzes its uptake across the intestinal epithelium. It survives and replicates in an acidic vacuole through the action of virulence factors secreted by a type three secretion system located on Salmonella pathogenicity island 2 (SPI-2). Two secreted effectors, SifA and SseJ, are sufficient for endosomal tubule formation, which modifies the vacuole and enables Salmonella to replicate within it. Two-color, superresolution imaging of the secreted virulence factor SseJ and tubulin revealed that SseJ formed clusters of conserved size at regular, periodic intervals in the host cytoplasm. Analysis of SseJ clustering indicated the presence of a pearling effect, which is a force-driven, osmotically sensitive process. The pearling transition is an instability driven by membranes under tension; it is induced by hypotonic or hypertonic buffer exchange and leads to the formation of beadlike structures of similar size and regular spacing. Reducing the osmolality of the fixation conditions using glutaraldehyde enabled visualization of continuous and intact tubules. Correlation analysis revealed that SseJ was colocalized with the motor protein kinesin. Tubulation of the endoplasmic reticulum is driven by microtubule motors, and in the present work, we describe how Salmonella has coopted the microtubule motor kinesin to drive the force-dependent process of endosomal tubulation. Thus, endosomal tubule formation is a force-driven process catalyzed by Salmonella virulence factors secreted into the host cytoplasm during infection.
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- 2018
14. Nucleoid structure, segregation and signaling in Escherichia coli studied with multi-color single-molecule localization microscopy
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Spahn, Christoph Klaus and Spahn, Christoph Klaus
- Abstract
Ziel dieser Arbeit war die Untersuchung der räumlichen und zeitlichen Organisation des Chromosoms (Nucleoid) und dessen Segregation im gram-negativen Bakteriums Escherichia coli (E. coli) mittels höchstauflösender Fluoreszenzmikroskopie. Dazu wurde die Einzelmolekül-Lokalisations-Mikroskopie (single molecule localization microscopy, SMLM) eingesetzt, welche eine räumliche Auflösung von 20 nm erreicht und gleichzeitig quantitative Informationen zur Anzahl und Verteilung von Proteinen, als auch zu Protein-Protein-Interaktionen liefert. Im ersten Teil wurde die Organisation des E. coli Nucleoids lichtmikroskopisch mit höchster Auflösung untersucht. Hierzu wurde ein Verfahren zur Fluoreszenzmarkierung naszenter Desoxyribonuklein-säure (deoxyribonucleic acid, DNA) verwendet, welches auf dem Einbau des Thymidin-Analogons 5-Ethynyl-2‘-Desoxyuridin (EdU) während der Replikation basiert und nachträglich die Markierung mit Azid-konjugierten photoschaltbaren Fluorophoren mittels Click-Chemie ermöglicht. Mit diesem Verfahren konnte eine hohe Markierungsdichte erreicht werden, welche eine essenzielle Voraussetzung für SMLM darstellt. Markierte Nucleoide wurden mittels direkter stochastischer optischer Rekonstruktionsmikroskopie (direct optical reconstruction microscopy, dSTORM) hochaufgelöst, was kompakte DNA-Strukturen mit Durchmessern von lediglich 50-200 nm enthüllte. Der Vergleich unterschiedlich großer E. coli Zellen lieferte Hinweise für eine wachstumsabhängige Segregation der Schwesterchromosomen. Dreidimensionale SMLM Experimente zeigten, dass das E. coli Nucleoid hierbei eine helikale Struktur aufweist und durchgehend in der Nähe der inneren Membran lokalisiert ist. Im zweiten Teil wurde die räumliche Organisation des osmosensorischen Regulatorproteins OmpR untersucht. Dieses Protein ist Teil des EnvZ-OmpR Zweikomponentensystems, welches die Anpassung von E. coli Zellen an ungünstige Umweltbedingungen ermöglicht. Um die räumliche Organisation von OmpR mit dem E. coli Nu, Bacteria are highly organized organisms which are able to adapt to and propagate under a multitude of environmental conditions. Propagation hereby requires reliable chromosome replication and segregation which has to occur cooperatively with other cellular processes such as transcription, translation or signaling. Several mechanisms were proposed for segregation of the Escherichia coli (E. coli) chromosome, for example a mitotic-like active segregation model or entropy-based passive chromosome segregation. Another segregation model suggests coupled transcription, translation and insertion of membrane proteins (termed "transertion"), which links the replicating chromosome (nucleoid) to the growing cell cylinder. Fluorescence microscopy was widely used to provide evidence for a distinct segregation model. However, the dynamic nature of bacterial chromosomes, the small bacterial size and the optical resolution limit of ~ 200-300 nm impair unveiling the underlying mechanisms. With the emergence of super-resolution fluorescence microscopy techniques and advanced labeling methods, a new toolbox became available enabling scientists to visualize biomolecules and cellular processes in unprecedented detail. Single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) represents a set of super-resolution microscopy techniques which relies on the temporal separation of the fluorescence signal and detection of single fluorophores. Separation can be achieved using photoactivatable or -convertible fluorescent proteins (FPs) in photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM), photoswitchable organic dyes in direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (dSTORM) or dynamically binding fluorescent probes in point accumulation for imaging in nanoscale topography (PAINT). In all these techniques, the fluorescence emission pattern of single fluorophores is spatially localized with nanometer-precision. An artificial image is finally reconstructed from the coordinates of all single fluorophores det
- Published
- 2017
15. Nanoscopy of bacterial cells immobilized by holographic optical tweezers
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Diekmann, Robin, Wolfson, Deanna L., Spahn, Christoph Klaus, Heilemann, Mike, Schüttpelz, Mark, Huser, Thomas, Diekmann, Robin, Wolfson, Deanna L., Spahn, Christoph Klaus, Heilemann, Mike, Schüttpelz, Mark, and Huser, Thomas
- Abstract
Imaging non-adherent cells by super-resolution far-field fluorescence microscopy is currently not possible because of their rapid movement while in suspension. Holographic optical tweezers (HOTs) enable the ability to freely control the number and position of optical traps, thus facilitating the unrestricted manipulation of cells in a volume around the focal plane. Here we show that immobilizing non-adherent cells by optical tweezers is sufficient to achieve optical resolution well below the diffraction limit using localization microscopy. Individual cells can be oriented arbitrarily but preferably either horizontally or vertically relative to the microscope’s image plane, enabling access to sample sections that are impossible to achieve with conventional sample preparation and immobilization. This opens up new opportunities to super-resolve the nanoscale organization of chromosomal DNA in individual bacterial cells.
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- 2016
16. Nanoscopy of bacterial cells immobilized by holographic optical tweezers
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Diekmann, Robin, primary, Wolfson, Deanna L., additional, Spahn, Christoph, additional, Heilemann, Mike, additional, Schüttpelz, Mark, additional, and Huser, Thomas, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. BACE-1 is expressed in the blood–brain barrier endothelium and is upregulated in a murine model of Alzheimer’s disease
- Author
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Devraj, Kavi, primary, Poznanovic, Slobodan, additional, Spahn, Christoph, additional, Schwall, Gerhard, additional, Harter, Patrick N, additional, Mittelbronn, Michel, additional, Antoniello, Katia, additional, Paganetti, Paolo, additional, Muhs, Andreas, additional, Heilemann, Mike, additional, Hawkins, Richard A, additional, Schrattenholz, André, additional, and Liebner, Stefan, additional
- Published
- 2015
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18. Overview of international organic market development and potential export markets for organic products of Ukraine
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Schneider, Monika, Richter, Toralf, Spahn, Christoph, and Portmann, Katrin
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Markets and trade ,Ukraine - Abstract
From the Summar of the Report Production At worldwide level in year 2003 66% of the world’s organic land (total 24 mio ha) are concentrated in two continents: Australia and Latin America. In these regions extensive grazing land is widespread beside the whole game of plant production, from cereals to coffee, tea and other tropical products. In Northern America the organic farmland achieves 1,5 mio ha. Europe has 23 % of the worldwide organic land (5,5 mio ha), these 5,5 mio ha correspond to almost 2% of agricultural land managed organically. Liechtenstein is with 26 % of agricultural area managed organically the leader followed by Aus-tria with 11% and Switzerland with 10%. In most countries the organically managed surface is still increasing. In the enlarged EU the area raised 4% from year 2002 to 2003, in the new countries of the EU (Poland, Estonia, Lithuania and Hungary) the growing rates of organic farm land is over 10%. Small declines have been observed in Denmark, The Netherlands, Italy and United Kingdom. In the European Union and Switzerland the agrarian policy supports organic sec-tor with different measurers like direct payments for organically managed area, contribution for conversion, payments for environmental services and animal wel-fare, training and capacity building, research programs etc. Ukraine was the granary of the former Soviet Union. Large surfaces of fertile black soils are favourable for organic farming. In Ukraine 230’000 ha are certified organic or in conversion in year 2003. This represents 0.58% of land area under organic management. 69 production units with an average size about 3’500 ha are certified. Wheat, barley, sunflower and corn are the most important crops on these farms. The organic production increased in the last years with the expecta-tion to get access to export markets. In Ukraine certified organic fruit and vegetable producers are missing. There is also nearly no animal husbandry farm certified. The potential for conversion of plant production units is high, because many farmers use few external inputs. For smaller farms, without access to export markets, the certification costs of international certifiers are unattainable. Until now the agrarian policy doesn’t support especially organic farming. The ministry of agriculture and the commission of the parliament for agriculture are in contact with the new organic farming association Biolan Ukraine and other stake-holders for the elaboration of a law for organic production. There is advisory and training capacity for organic farming but this is still insufficient for the whole country. Market overview Europe and Northern America are responsible for 97% of organic sales to con-sumers. There is a global harmonisation of market trends and buying behaviours. The organic consumer lives in urban centres, has a higher education which is transformed in higher income, is young and has children or is older with a healthy lifestyle. Important issues for this consumer are food and health (free of dangersafety, label, certification) and food and emotions (animal welfare, regional product). Important triggers for buying organic are children, allergies and healthy life-style. The barriers for not buying organic are the price, the availability and in general less importance given to nutrition. Between the countries there are significant differences in the importance of the sales channels from direct marketing included weekly markets and box schemes, specialised organic food shops to general food shops (retailer shops, supermarkets, and discounter). General food shops are the most important sales channels over all and especially in countries with mature food markets like Austria, Den-mark, France, Switzerland and United Kingdom. Germany with a well developed organic food market is an exception with only 35 % of sales in general food shops. The organic market is in a growing phase in Northern America (15%-30%), Italy, The Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Portugal and Finland. The rest of the Euro-pean countries, the Ukrainian neighbours like Russia and the Baltic States, Asian countries like Korea and Chine and Middle East countries like Saudi Arabia are in the phase of emerging market. The most important markets (in value and in decreasing order) are: USA, Ger-many, United Kingdom, France, Italy, Canada and Switzerland. In Switzerland the average consumer spends 104 Euro on organic products per annum, this is the highest amount. The price premiums for organic food paid to the farmers in the EU countries in year 2000 vary tremendous between the countries and the products. For cereals the average was 102% and the highest average price premium for plant product was reported for potatoes with 257%. The price premiums for animal products paid in EU are in average lower (milk 22%, beef 34% pork 68%) than for plant products with exception of poultry with 182% and eggs with 167%. In Europe there are supply and demand imbalances: oversupply in milk and beef and supply gaps in cereals. European organic fruit, vegetables and cereals can normally be sold as organic within Europe. Tropical, off season and exotic (eth-nic) products are imported to Europe and Northern America. In Europe the self sufficiency degree shows big variations from country to country and product to product. In cereals for example in year 2001 Belgium has 2% self sufficiency and Spain 316%, France an exporter of conventional cereals reports self sufficiency degree for organic of 35%. Even more important then the self suf-ficiency degrees are supply gaps (national production and imports are not suffi-cient). In the OMIaRD market research there were expected the following supply deficit for year 2003/04: For wheat and barley in Germany and Slovenia, for rye in Slovenia and Finland, for oilseed in Germany, Finland and Sweden, for legumi-nous fodder crops in Austria, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands and United King-dom. Access to the EU and Swiss market is possible when the products are certified according to EU-standard (EU-regulations 2092/91 and 1804/99) or Swiss or-ganic ordinance. Depending on the market, other, mainly private, standards need to be fulfilled In Ukraine the national market for organic products is in the initial phase with some imported products like baby food, tea or coffee. The potential organic con-sumers are urban, younger professional women and young families with small children, from the new middle to upper class. At the moment they buy so called environmental clean products, with 20% to 100% price premium. These products are not certified; they are supposed to come from regions without relevant human made pollution and free of radioactivity. The Ukrainian consumers are aware of important organic issues like health and dangers residues. Up to now “organic” is not protected by law. Experts estimate that 5% to 10% of the Ukrainian products certified organic (mainly cereals and oilseeds) are sold as organic and exported to Western Europe.
- Published
- 2005
19. Click chemistry facilitates direct labelling and super-resolution imaging of nucleic acids and proteins
- Author
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Raulf, Anika, Spahn, Christoph Klaus, Zessin, Patrick, Finan, Kieran, Bernhardt, Stefan, Heckel, Alexander, Heilemann, Mike, Raulf, Anika, Spahn, Christoph Klaus, Zessin, Patrick, Finan, Kieran, Bernhardt, Stefan, Heckel, Alexander, and Heilemann, Mike
- Abstract
We demonstrate high-density labelling of cellular DNA and RNA using click chemistry and perform confocal and super-resolution microscopy. We visualize the crescent and ring-like structure of densely packed RNA in nucleoli. We further demonstrate click chemistry with unnatural amino acids for super-resolution imaging of outer-membrane proteins of E. coli.
- Published
- 2014
20. Ermittlung von derzeitigen und absehbaren Vermarktungsproblemen entlang der Wertschöpfungskette differenziert nach Produktgruppen (Probleme hinsichtlich z.B. Mengen, Preise, Qualitäten, Logistik etc.) Teilbereich: Produktgruppe Rindfleisch
- Author
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Bahrdt, Katja, Schaer, Burkhard, Spahn, Christoph, and Strauch, Claudia
- Subjects
Markets and trade ,Processing, packaging and transportation - Abstract
Die Studie zur Ermittlung von derzeitigen und absehbaren Vermarktungsproblemen im Markt für ökologisch erzeugtes Rindfleisch wurde mit der Forschungsmethode einer „mehrstufigen Befragung nach dem Delphi-Prinzip“ bearbeitet. Den Befragungen war eine umfassende Analyse der Veröffentlichungen über den Markt für ökologisch erzeugtes Rindfleisch vorausgegangen. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass die Branche sich in einem strukturellen Engpass befindet. Das individualistische Agieren zahlreicher kleiner Akteure stößt im größer werdenden Markt und angesichts zunehmender Komplexität an Grenzen. Es gibt Ansätze von verstärkter Kooperation, die auch mit Erfolg am Markt belohnt werden. Die Darstellung der Probleme im Ergebnisteil hat gezeigt, dass viele Probleme wie uneinheitliche Verbraucheransprache und fehlende Qualifikationen durch die Struktur des Ökomarktes allgemein entstanden sind. Andere Probleme wie Marktrisiken und Richtlinien liegen außerhalb des Einflussbereichs der Marktteilnehmer. Als ein zentrales Ergebnis, das sich wie ein roter Faden durch die Studie zieht, ist der Mangel an Kommunikation innerhalb der Branche und damit verbunden eine genereller Informationsmangel. Die vorgeschlagene Lösung, die als Schlüssel für einige angesprochene Schwierigkeiten gelten kann, ist der horizontale und vertikale Zusammenschluss von Partnern mit ähnlichen Interessen. Ein weiteres zentrales Problem könnte mit dem Begriff „Rechtsunsicherheit“ umrissen werden. Die Marktteilnehmer fühlen sich angesichts der Mängel der so genannten „EU-Öko-Verordnung“ (abweichende Produktions- und Kontrollstandards innerhalb benachbarter Märkte) stark verunsichert. Die Schwächen des bestehenden Kontrollsystems, das als zu schwerfällig, als zu ineffizient, als zu uneinheitlich innerhalb Europas aber auch innerhalb Deutschlands betrachtet wird, verstärken diese Unsicherheit.
- Published
- 2002
21. Ermittlung von derzeitigen und absehbaren Vermarktungsproblemen entlang der Wertschöpfungskette differenziert nach Produktgruppen (Probleme hinsichtlich z.B. Mengen, Preise, Qualitäten, Logistik etc.). Teilbereich: Produktgruppe Schweinefleisch
- Author
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Bahrdt, Katja, Schaer, Burkhard, Spahn, Christoph, Stienen, Michael, and Strauch, Claudia
- Subjects
Markets and trade ,Processing, packaging and transportation - Abstract
Die Studie wurde mit der Forschungsmethode einer „mehrstufigen Befragung nach dem Delphi-Prinzip“ bearbeitet. Den Befragungen vorausgegangen war eine umfassende Analyse der Veröffentlichungen über den Markt für ökologisches Schweinefleisch. Die Resultate aus den Befragungen haben eine Problem- und Schwachstellenanalyse des Marktes ergeben. Für zehn Problemkreise wurden die aktuelle Bedeutung, Problempotentiale und Wirkungen und auch Lösungsansätze beschrieben. Die zehn Problemkreise sind: - Qualität - Rückverfolgbarkeit - Kommunikation - Verbraucheransprache - Marktrisiko und Kapitalisierung - Züchtung und Ferkelbeschaffung - Teilstückproblematik - Wirtschaftlichkeit und Markt - Richtlinien - Zusatzstoffe Die Darstellung der Probleme im Ergebnisteil hat gezeigt, dass viele Probleme wie uneinheitliche Verbraucheransprache und fehlende Qualifikationen durch die Struktur des Ökomarktes allgemein entstanden sind. Andere Probleme wie Marktrisiken und Richtlinien liegen außerhalb des Einflussbereichs der Marktteilnehmer. Auffällig war eine große Unsicherheit bei der Einschätzung von Marktvolumen und -entwicklung, von Wettbewerbern und der eigenen Positionierung. Mit einer Untersuchung des Marktes für Ökoschweinefleisch in Dänemark werden die Unterschiede zum deutschen Markt deutlich. Die dänische Vorgehensweise wie Überwachung der Futtermittel, des Gesundheitsstatus der Tiere und der verabreichtren Arzneimittel durch den Staat sowie ein landesweit einheitliches Qualitäts- und Gesundheitsmanagement sollte als Vorbild für Deutschland fungieren. Als ein zentrales Ergebnis, das sich wie ein roter Faden durch die Studie zieht, ist der Mangel an Kommunikation innerhalb der Branche und damit verbunden eine genereller Informationsmangel. Die vorgeschlagene Lösung, die als Schlüssel für einige angesprochene Schwierigkeiten gelten kann, ist der horizontale und vertikale Zusammenschluss von Partnern mit ähnlichen Interessen. Ein weiteres zentrales Problem könnte mit dem Begriff „Rechtsunsicherheit“ umrissen werden. Die Marktteilnehmer fühlen sich angesichts der Mängel der so genannten „EU-Öko-Verordnung“ (abweichende Produktions- und Kontrollstandards innerhalb benachbarter Märkte) stark verunsichert. Die Schwächen des bestehenden Kontrollsystems, das als zu schwerfällig, als zu ineffizient, als zu uneinheitlich innerhalb Europas aber auch innerhalb Deutschlands betrachtet wird, verstärken diese Unsicherheit.
- Published
- 2002
22. Improved Super-Resolution Imaging in Heavy Water
- Author
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Fuerstenberg, Alexandre, primary, Endesfelder, Ulrike, additional, Heilemann, Mike, additional, Klehs, Kathrin, additional, Lee, Steven F., additional, Malkusch, Sebastian, additional, Spahn, Christoph, additional, and Vérolet, Quentin, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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