Christoph Cremer

Christoph Cremer

Christoph Cremer (born in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany) is a German physicist and professor at the Ruprecht-Karls-University Heidelberg, who has successfully overcome the conventional limit of resolution that applies to light based investigations (the Abbe limit) by a range of different methods (1971/1978 development of the concept of 4Pi-microscopy; 1996 localization microscopy SPDM; 1997 spatially structured illumination SMI).

His actual microscope Vertico-SMI is the world’s fastest nano light microscope that allows large scale investigation of supramolecular complexes including living cell conditions. It allows 3 D imaging of biological preparations marked with conventional fluorescent dyes and reaches a resolution of 10 nm in 2D and 40 nm in 3D.

This nanoscope has therefore the potential to add substantially to the current revolution in optical imaging which will affect the entire molecular biology, medical and pharmaceutical research. The technology allows the development of new strategies for the prevention, the lowering of risk and therapeutic treatment of diseases.

Contents

Biography

Following a few semesters studying philosophy and history at Freiburg University and Munich University, Christoph Cremer studied Physics in Munich (with financial support from the "Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes") and completed his doctoral studies (Dr. rer.nat.) in Genetics and Biophysics in Freiburg. This was followed by post-doctoral studies at the Institute for Human Genetics at Freiburg University, several years in the USA at the University of California, and his „Habilitation“ (Dr. med. habil. in General Human Genetics and Experimental Cytogenetics, Medical Faculty, Freiburg University). Since 1983, he is teaching as a professor (chair since 2004) for “applied optics and information processing” at the Kirchhoff Institute for Physics at the University of Heidelberg. In addition, he is a scientific member of the Interdisciplinary Center for Scientific Computing (IWR), of the Institute for Pharmacy and Molecular Biotechnology (IPMB), as well as of the University’s „Bioquant“ Center. Christoph Cremer is a participant in three current “Projects of Excellence” of the University of Heidelberg (2007–2012), and is also a partner in the Biotechnology Cluster for cell-based and molecular medicine, one of five clusters selected in 2008 as German BMBF Clusters of Excellence. Elected as Second Speaker of the Senate of the University of Heidelberg (since 2006), Professor Cremer is also involved in university governance and politics. In his function as Adjunct Professor at the US University of Maine and as scientific member of the renowned Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor/Maine), where he undertakes research for several weeks each year during the semester breaks, he is involved in the establishment of the biophysics center (Institute for Molecular Biophysics, IMB). IMB is linked with the University of Heidelberg through a „Global Network“ collaboration . He is married to architect and artist Dr. Letizia Mancino-Cremer, who since 1992 is president of the Goethe-Gesellschaft Heidelberg (www.letizia-mancino.eu).

Fundamental Developments

Developing the Concept of 4Pi Microscopy

Cremer was involved early in the further development of laser based light microscopy approaches. First ideas had their origin in his graduate student years in the 1970s. Jointly with his brother Thomas Cremer, now professor (chair) of Anthropology and Human Genetics at the Ludwigs-Maximilian University in Munich, Christoph Cremer proposed in a patent application in 1971 (DE 2116521) on the development of a hologram-based laser scanning 4Pi microscope. This patent application already contains the first ideas about the use of light switchable molecules for the improved optical acquisition of nanostructural information. The basic idea was to focus laser light from all sides (space angle 4Pi) in a spot with a diameter smaller than the conventional laser focus and to scan the object by means of this spot. In this manner, it should be possible to achieve an improved optical resolution beyond the conventional limit (approx. 200 nm lateral, 600 nm axial.[1][2] Since 1992, 4Pi microscopy has been developed by Stefan Hell (currently director at the Max-Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Göttingen, Germany) into a highly efficient, high resolution imaging process, using two microscope objective lenses of high numeric aperture opposing each other.[3][4]

Development of the first DNA Laser-UV-Microirradiation Technique for Living Cells

In the early 1970s, the brothers realized a UV laser micro irradiation instrument which for the first time made it possible to irradiate in a controlled manner only a tiny part of a living cell at the absorption maximum for DNA (257 nm).[5] This replaced the conventional UV partial irradiation practiced for over 60 years. In this way, it was possible for the first time to induce alterations in the DNA in a focused manner (i.e. at predetermined places in the cell nucleus of living cells) without compromising the cells ability to divide and to survive. Specific very small cell regions could be irradiated and thus the dynamics of macromolecules (DNA) contained there quantitatively estimated. Furthermore, due to the high speed of the process using irradiation times of fractions of a second, it became possible to irradiate even moving cell organelles. This development provided the basis for important experiments in the area of genome structure research (establishing the existence of so-called chromosome territories in living mammalian cells) and led, a few years later (1979/1980) to a successful collaboration with the biologist Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard (currently Director at the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology, Tübingen, Germany; Nobel Prize 1995). In this collaboration Christoph Cremer used his UV laser micro irradiation equipment to elicit cellular changes in the early larval stages of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster.[6][7]

Development of the Confocal Laser Scanning Microscopy for Fluorescence

On the basis of experience gained in the construction and application of the UV laser micro irradiation instrument, the Cremer brothers designed in 1978 a laser scanning process which scans point-by-point the three dimensional surface of an object by means of a focused laser beam and creates the over-all picture by electronic means similar to those used in scanning electron microscopes.[8] It is this plan for the construction of a confocal laser scanning microscope (CSLM), which for the first time combined the laser scanning method with the 3D detection of biological objects labeled with fluorescent markers that earned Christoph Cremer his professorial position at the University of Heidelberg. During the next decade, the confocal fluorescence microscopy was developed into a technically fully matured state in particular by groups working at the University of Amsterdam and the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Heidelberg and their industry partners. In later years, this technology was adopted widely by biomolecular and biomedical laboratories and remains to this day the gold standard as far as three dimensional light microscopy with conventional resolution is concerned.

Development of the Localization Microscopy/Spatially Structured Illumination

The goal of microscopy is in many cases to determine the size of individual, small objects. Conventional fluorescence microscopy can only establish sizes to around the conventional optical resolution limit of approximately 200 nm (lateral). Around 1995, Christoph Cremer commenced with the development of a light microscopic process, which achieved a substantially improved size resolution of cellular nanostructures stained with a fluorescent marker. This time he employed the principle of wide field microscopy combined with structured laser illumination (spatially modulated illumination, SMI.[9] Currently, a size resolution of 30 – 40 nm (approximately 1/16 – 1/13 of the wave length used) is being achieved. In addition, this technology is no longer subjected to the speed limitations of the focusing microscopy so that it becomes possible to undertake 3D analyses of whole cells within short observation times (at the moment around a few seconds). Also since around 1995, Christoph Cremer developed and realized new fluorescence based wide field microscopy approaches which had as their goal the improvement of the effective optical resolution (in terms of the smallest detectable distance between two localized objects) down to a fraction of the conventional resolution (spectral precision distance/position determination microscopy, SPDM). Combining SPDM and SMI, known as Vertico SMI microscopy[10] Christoph Cremer can currently achieve a resolution of approx. 10 nm in 2D and 40 nm in 3D in wide field images of whole living cells.[11] Widefield 3D “nanoimages” of whole living cells currently still take about two minutes, but work to reduce this further is currently under way. Vertico-SMI is currently the fastest optical 3D nanoscope for the three dimensional structural analysis of whole cells worldwide.

With this optical nanoscope, it is possible to use conventional, well established and inexpensive fluorescent dyes, from the GFP group, subject of a Nobel Prize in 2008, and its dye variants, to the well-known Alexa and fluorescein dyes.[12]

External links

Literatur

  1. ^ Considerations on a laser-scanning-microscope with high resolution and depth of field: C. Cremer and T. Cremer in M1CROSCOPICA ACTA VOL. 81 NUMBER 1 September, pp. 31—44 (1978)
  2. ^ Rise, fall and resurrection of chromosome territories: a historical perspective Part II. Fall and resurrection of CTs during the 1950th to 1980th. Part III. Chromosome territories and the functional nuclear architecture: experiments and models from the 1990th to the present. T. Cremer and C. Cremer In EUROPEAN JOURNAL of HISTOCHEMISTRY, Vol. 50, pp. 223-272(2006)
  3. ^ Measurement of the 4pi-confocal point spread function proves 75 nm axial resolution: S. Hell, S. Lindek, C. Cremer, E. H. K. Stelzer in APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS Vol 64, pp. 1335-1337 (1994)
  4. ^ Two-photon excitation 4Pi confocal microscope - Enhanced axial resolution microscope for biological research: P. E. Hänninen, S. W. Hell, J. Salo, E. Soini, C. Cremer, in APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, Vol 68, pp. 1698-1700 (1995)
  5. ^ An ultraviolet Laser microbeam for 257 nm/Eine Laser-UV-Mikrobestrahlungsapparatur für 257 nm: C. Cremer, C. Zorn und T. Cremer in MICROSCOPICA ACTA Vol. 75 • No. 4, pp. 331—337 (1974)
  6. ^ A Fate Map for the Larval Epidermis of Drosophila melanogaster: Localized Cuticle Defects Following Irradiation of the Blastoderm with an Ultraviolet Laser Microbeam: M. Lohs-Schardin, C. Cremer and C. Nüsslein-Volhard in DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY 73, pp. 239-255 (1979)
  7. ^ A dorso-ventral shift of embryonic primordia in a new maternal-effect mutant of Drosophila: C. Nüsslein-Volhard, M. Lohs-Schardin, K.Sander and C. Cremer in NATURE (London), Vol. 283, No. 5746, pp. 474-476(1980)
  8. ^ Considerations on a laser-scanning-microscope with high resolution and depth of field: C. Cremer and T. Cremer in M1CROSCOPICA ACTA VOL. 81 NUMBER 1 September, pp. 31—44 (1978)
  9. ^ Nano-structure analysis using Spatially Modulated Illumination microscopy: D. Baddeley, C. Batram, Y. Weiland, C. Cremer, U.J. Birk in NATURE PROTOCOLS, Vol 2, pp. 2640–2646 (2007)
  10. ^ High precision structural analysis of subnuclear complexes in fixed and live cells via Spatially Modulated Illumination (SMI) microscopy: J. Reymann, D. Baddeley, P. Lemmer, W. Stadter, T. Jegou, K. Rippe, C. Cremer, U. Birk in CHROMOSOME RESEARCH, Vol. 16, pp. 367 –382 (2008)
  11. ^ SPDM – Light Microscopy with Single Molecule Resolution at the Nanoscale: P. Lemmer, M.Gunkel, D.Baddeley, R. Kaufmann, A. Urich, Y. Weiland, J.Reymann, P. Müller, M. Hausmann, C. Cremer in APPLIED PHYSICS B, Vol 93, pp. 1-12 (2008).
  12. ^ Manuel Gunkel, Fabian Erdel, Karsten Rippe, Paul Lemmer, Rainer Kaufmann, Christoph Hörmann, Roman Amberger and Christoph Cremer: Dual color localization microscopy of cellular nanostructures. In: Biotechnology Journal, 2009, 4, 927-938. ISSN 1860-6768

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