Abstract

High-speed imaging is an ideal technique to accurately resolve the temporal and spatial characteristics of rapid events at either the molecular or cellular level. In this article, the digital imaging techniques used to simultaneously acquire transillumination phase-contrast images, at 240 images s−1 (high-speed), to characterize ciliary beat frequency, and fluorescence images, at 30 images s−1 (fast), to measure intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i), are described. With this technique, a precise correlation between the changes in ciliary beat frequency with changes in [Ca2+]i can be made. Simultaneous imaging is achieved by using different wavelengths of light to form the phase-contrast and fluorescent images and selectively directing these light wavelengths to different cameras with dichroic mirrors and bandpass filters. High-speed images compatible with standard video recording equipment are obtained by prematurely resetting the raster scan of a CCD camera with additional vertical synchronization pulses. The fast [Ca2+]i images are determined using the ratiometric dye fura-2 and a recording technique that monitors rapid changes in fluorescence at a single wavelength and uses intermittent reference images for calibration.

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