By
Charmain Tan Courcelle MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- The pooled resources of the Department of Animal
and Dairy Sciences and the College of Veterinary Medicine
may help establish Mississippi State University as a leader
in imaging technologies for the agricultural and veterinary
sciences. MSU
scientists already apply satellite-based remote sensing
imagery to agriculture. However, Scott Willard and Peter
Ryan, animal scientists with the Mississippi Agricultural
and Forestry Experiment Station, want a much closer,
earthbound view of the challenges facing the animal food
production industry. "We'd
like to take microscopy and other imaging systems and apply
them to areas in large animal agriculture -- for example,
animal health, food safety and pathogenesis (of microbes
found in food animals)," Willard said. Together
with CVM researchers Hart Bailey and Mark Lawrence, Willard
and Ryan are working to establish a core laboratory facility
equipped with current imaging technologies that will help
them do just that. Two of
these technologies -- biophotonics and fluorescence
microscopy -- take advantage of molecular reporters that
allow researchers to easily examine functions and structures
within living cells, tissues or organs. Biophotonics
captures the glow from cells that have received the firefly
gene luciferase to reveal chemical reactions within
biological systems. A gene from the jellyfish imparts vivid
colors of green, yellow or blue-green to "transformed" cells
that can be detected with a fluorescence
microscope. Infrared
thermal imaging and ultrasound imaging, the two other
techniques of interest to the team, are used commonly as
noninvasive examination and diagnostic tools in medical and
veterinary settings. "The
real beauty of these systems is that you can do dynamic,
real-time analyses of living organisms," Willard said.
"These techniques can be used to ask and answer questions
related to how cells interact with each other or how they
respond to external signals like environmental agents,
toxins or disease organisms." The
team agreed that this type of understanding would help
reveal more about animal physiology and provide clues to
improving animal handling practices and to preventing animal
disease. The
foundation for an imaging facility has been laid with
existing ultrasound machines and with new biophotonics,
fluorescence microscopy and infrared thermal imaging
equipment. Much of this equipment was obtained as part of a
current neuroscience collaboration among Willard, Ryan and
CVM researchers Jan Chambers and Russell Carr, which is
sponsored by the National Science Foundation. Willard, Ryan,
Bailey and Lawrence plan to extend the application of this
technology further to tackle questions in food animals.
To test
this possibility, the team will initially use catfish as a
model organism. The group hopes that by the end of this
fall, they will have a clearer idea of the range of these
imaging technologies. In the meantime, efforts continue to
improve the facility's work space and to expand its imaging
capabilities. "We
think setting up a core imaging facility on this campus will
give us a jump in providing answers to animal production
questions," Ryan said. "Imaging resources like this are
usually found in medical schools, but we hope to change this
by establishing one of the first centers in the agricultural
and veterinary sciences." Released:
Feb. 25, 2002
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
![]()
Imaging facility
a first for animal and vet sciences
For more information, contact:
Dr. Scott Willard, (662) 325-0040,
Dr.
Peter Ryan, (662) 325-2802
Visit: DAFVM
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