About our equipment
Optical imaging offers unique possibilities for in vitro and in vivo imaging applications, especially in the context of molecular imaging.
read moreAbout our equipment
Optical imaging offers unique possibilities for in vitro and in vivo imaging applications, especially in the context of molecular imaging.
With the MILabs optical imaging module and the IVIS Lumina imaging system, both present in PRIME, it is possible to identify disease pathways, determine mechanisms of action, evaluate drug compounds, and monitor their effects on disease progression in living animals non-invasively.
Both imaging systems are highly sensitive and can image fluorescent and/or bioluminescent reporters and probes both in vivo and in vitro. The systems are user friendly and allow rapid (1-10 minutes) quantitative assessment of fluorescence in 3 mice or 1 rat simultaneously. The advantage is that a huge amount of biological tools are commercially available such as transgenic reporter animals, reporter tumor cells, microorganisms , gene reporters, enzymatic cleavable substrates and quantum dots. In-house near infrared fluorescent probes are produced for fluorescence imaging.
Applications in PRIME
The MILabs optical imaging module and the IVIS Lumina can be used for the following applications:
read moreIVIS Lumina Caliber
Standard fluorescent filter sets
Filter set |
Label |
Background Passband (nm) |
Excitation Passband (nm) |
Emission Passband (nm) |
Dyes, Fluorescent proteins, and Quantum dots |
1 |
Green |
410-440 |
445-490 |
515-575 |
GFP, EGFP, FITC |
2 |
Red |
460-490 |
500-550 |
575-650 |
DsRed, PKH26, Qdot® 605 |
3 |
Far-red |
580-610 |
615-665 |
695-770 |
Cy5.5, Alexa Fluor, Qdot®705 |
4 |
NIR |
665-695 |
705-780 |
810-885 |
ICG, Qdot® 800 |
Optical Imaging unit MILabs
The MILabs OI units can be used for bioluminescence, fluorescence and Cherenkov imaging, and it can even be combined with the MILabs U-SPECT-6/CT at our facility, to do multimodal imaging. Researchers at PRIME use it for a wide variety of applications to answer their research questions, such as ex vivo imaging of luminescent cells seeded in bone disks, in vivo follow-up of tumor growth through luminescence imaging, or in vivo biodistribution of fluorescently labeled compounds.