▶ Watch On-Demand | 55 Minutes

Linking Cardiac Nanostructure and Molecular Organization to Cardiac Function

Learn about a novel approach for studying the nano-structural underpinnings of electrical signal propagation
presented by Rengasayee (Sai) Veeraraghavan, Ph.D. and Heather Struckman, BS, MS, Ohio State University's Nanocardiology Lab (August 25, 2021)

       PRESENTATION HIGHLIGHTS:

  • [00:02:49] Introduction: Taking an engineering approach to cardiology
  • [00:09:27] How heart cells communicate
  • [00:12:37] The flaws in existing models & the phenomena they cannot explain
  • [00:16:23] The iCLEM method for understanding protein distribution along with structural context
  • [00:31:24] Quantiying protein organization at the nano-scale with the STORM-RLA method
  • [00:40:41] Probing structure-function relationships
  • [00:44:52] Live audience Q&A

 

Q&A with the Speakers

Can I use iCLEM on any kind of sample?
Were the experiments shown here, especially any showing STORM data, performed on cells or on tissue samples?
If you use iCLEM, do not need to perform CLEM?
Do you have any plans or goals or ideas on how to constrain the generation of convex hulls (shown in the STORM data) based on parameters from the EM derived data.
Have you considered using serial section array or serial block-face to study the intercalated structure?
How is the labeling for STORM done? What is your accuracy in determining the position of the molecules?
It looked like some of the STORM images were 3D. How did you get 3D STORM?
What is the quantitative nature of this data?
Is there a particular image analysis approach?
Have you considered looking at changes in normal cells under phosphorylation?