5 Practical Ways to Accelerate Your Microscopy Experiments

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Takeo Ogama

Takeo Ogama

30 September, 2020

When returning to the lab, one common concern is how to catch up on a delayed experiment. While you may have lost valuable time social distancing, there are a few smart tricks that can help you accelerate experiments and stay on schedule.

A basic strategy is to perform work faster, simultaneously, or both. But, how? The answer is to learn from concepts used in the unique approaches of high-content or high-throughput experiments and apply them to your own project.

Here are five practical ways to accelerate your microscopy experiments:

1. Observe more samples.

If you have more than two slides or two dishes to observe, why not observe them all at once?

After all, the setup is simple. Inverted microscopes stages have universal mounting standards like a K-mount with a 160 × 110 mm dimension. Plus, many vendors provide stage inserts to handle a variety of samples.

It’s a quick, easy fix to observe multiple dishes or multiple slides so that you can perform your experiment at the same time—and it has substantial time-saving benefits. This approach reduces time for sample exchange and the general experimental setup because most time-consuming setting processes, such as focusing or image acquisition optimization, are the almost the same for multiple samples.

Today, less time in your lab also provides a clear advantage as institutions continue to practice social distancing and limit lab access.

multiple samples on a microscope sample holder

Figure 1. By putting three dishes on the microscope stage instead of just one, you can reduce the time spent on experiment prep and setting optimization, shortening your time in the lab

2. Speed things up.

Next, optimize the speed of your image acquisition. Because the usual bottleneck that slows down image acquisition is the mechanical switching process of filters or fluorescence cubes, it’s worth considering the following ideas:

microscope imaging

Figure 2. Image acquisition sequence variation showing how long each sequence takes. (Top) Ch > Z sequence, (middle) Z > Ch sequence, which can save time by reducing the mechanical movement for switching channels, (bottom) Ch > Z sequence with no mechanical movement for the Ch switch.

3. Balance throughput with image quality.

In general, you should try to acquire the best quality images. After all, an image is the main source of data, so image quality determines the quality for downstream analysis. But it’s worth considering the level of image quality needed for the purpose of your experiment to accelerate your project. Here are two things to consider:

field of view microscope

Figure 3. (Top) Light intensity at the optical axis and at the peripheral area of the field of view is one element that can impact image quality. When we observe a larger FOV, shading gets worse. (Bottom left) Stitching with a larger FOV means less time for image acquisition but the image seam might stand out. This strategy can speed up your experiment when a lower image quality is acceptable. (Bottom right) If a seamlessly stitched image is needed, then use a smaller FOV.

4. Check for data consistency and a reference point.

When doing an experiment with many samples, data consistency and a reference point are the keys to data reliability and reproducibility. To achieve this:

5. Leverage overnight opportunities.

Some motorized and automated systems like high-content screening systems or whole slide imaging scanners have a batch function for image acquisitions. Batch processing is available with analysis software as well. If you have enough samples or data to process overnight, you should try. Your tools can continue your experiment while you’re sleeping.

As labs adapt their policies daily to ensure the safety and health of employees, please note that an overnight experiment might have a risk of unexpected lockdown or sudden change in institute policy. Remember to check with your manager if it’s okay to conduct an overnight experiment before moving forward.

Takeo Ogama

Takeo Ogama

Senior Product and Strategy Planner and Product Manager

Takeo Ogama is a senior product and strategy planner and a product manager for microscope cameras at Evident. He has eight years of experience working in the research and development department for various products, including cameras, and eight years of product planning, marketing, and management experience. He holds a master’s degree in neutrino physics from Osaka University in Japan.