Laser microsurgery and laser-generated optical force traps
(optical tweezers) are both valuable light microscopic-based
approaches for studying intra- and extracellular motility
processes, including chromosome segregation during mitosis.
Here we describe a system in use in our laboratory that allows
living cells to be followed by high-resolution differential
interference contrast (DIC) video-enhanced time-lapse light
microscopy while selected mitotic organelles and spindle components
are subjected to laser microsurgery and/or manipulation
with an optical force trap. This system couples the output from
two different Neodymium-YAG lasers to the same inverted light
microscope equipped with both phase-contrast and de Senarmont
compensation DIC optics, a motorized stage, and a high-resolution
low-light-level CCD camera. Unlike similar systems using
phase-contrast optics, our DIC-based system can image living
cells in thin optical sections without contamination due to
phase halos or out-of-focus object information. These advantages
greatly facilitate laser-based light microscopic studies on
mitotic organelles and components, including spindle poles
(centrosomes) and kinetochores, which are at or below the
resolution limit of the light microscope and buried within a
large complex structure. When used in conjunction with image
processing and high-resolution object-tracking techniques, our
system provides new information on the roles that kinetochores
and spindle microtubules play during chromosome segregation
in plant and animal cells.