A Web Atlas of Cellular Structures Using Light and Confocal Microscopy
Sheela Konda, Steve Rogers,
and Daniel E. Weber
This web site displays a series of light and confocal micrographs illustrating
a variety of subcellular structures and organelles.
We hope to provide a useful educational resource for people interested
in cytology who do not have
access to advanced imaging technologies or cell biological expertise.
We have employed a cultured epithelial cell line, CV1-monkey kidney cells, for these
experiments and stained for such organelles as the Golgi apparatus, the endoplasmic
reticulum, nucleus, mitochondria, and several cytoskeletal elements. Protocols
for each staining as well as a description of the microscopes
utilized are provided.
Confocal and fluorescent microscopy images help to reveal the intriguing structures of
the cell. We hope also to demonstrate the high quality imaging techniques available for
such visualization. This project has been made possible with the support of the Beckman Institute of Advanced Science and Technology's
Imaging Technology Group at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana.
Additional Resources
ITG Forums on the Web Atlas of Cellular Structures:
- A Web Atlas of Cellular
Structures Using Light and Confocal Microscopy, 20
August 1998
ITG Technical Reports:
Web atlas in the news:
- "Cells Afire" in NetWatch column in SCIENCE, Vol. 287, 10 March
2000
University of Illinois:
- The College of Medicine, University of Illinois,
has a Histology Course Home Page,
complete with their own Internet
Atlas of Histology. An interactive atlas using Java technology to navigate the
images, the developers recommend using a PC with 64MB of RAM and Netscape Navigator 4.0+
for best viewing, though a G3 Macintosh computer running MacOS 8.6 has been tested as
well. Certain portions of the Histology Course Home Page are restricted to
medical students at the UIUC.