Essential Microscopy Skills for Cell Biologists
Whether you are new to cell culture or refining your imaging workflow, a handful of core microscopy skills separate usable data from publishable data. Below are the practical techniques every cell biologist should master, from keeping cells alive on the stage to capturing consistent, quantitative images.
1. Aseptic Technique on the Microscope Stage
Microscopes live inside tissue-culture hoods as often as on lab benches. Keep the stage clean, avoid dragging sleeves across the dish, and use lens-compatible disinfectants such as 70% ethanol or quaternary ammonium wipes. If you image live cells repeatedly, consider an on-stage incubator to maintain 37 °C, 5% CO₂ and humidity.
2. Kohler Illumination
Kohler alignment gives even, glare-free brightfield and phase-contrast illumination. The routine is:
- Focus on the specimen and close the field diaphragm.
- Focus the condenser until the diaphragm edges are sharp.
- Centre the diaphragm image using the condenser centreing screws.
- Open the field diaphragm just outside the field of view.
- Set the condenser aperture to roughly 70% of the objective numerical aperture for best contrast.
3. Phase-Contrast for Live Cells
Phase contrast turns refractive-index differences into visible contrast, so you can watch live, unstained cells. Match the annulus to the objective phase ring (usually Ph1 for 10×/20×, Ph2 for 40×). Halos around cell edges are normal, but if the image looks flat or overly bright, re-centre the annulus.
4. Fluorescence Imaging Basics
Modern LED-based systems such as the EVOS line make fluorescence far more accessible, but a few rules still apply:
- Choose the correct light cube — excitation/emission spectra must match your fluorophore.
- Minimise light exposure — live cells photobleach and phototox quickly; use the shortest exposure that gives a good signal-to-noise ratio.
- Keep gain consistent — if you are comparing samples, lock exposure time and gain across the whole experiment.
5. Confluence and Cell-Counting Workflows
Manual counting with a haemocytometer is reliable for low-throughput work. For larger datasets, automated confluence tools such as those in the EVOS M3000/M5000 capture area coverage in seconds and export CSV data for downstream analysis.
6. Image Acquisition Best Practices
Quantitative microscopy starts before you press capture:
- Use the same illumination settings, focus method and camera binning for every image in a dataset.
- Include a scale bar in each exported image.
- Save raw or minimally compressed files; reserve JPEG only for presentations.
- Document objective magnification, NA, camera and software version in your methods.
7. Keep the Optics Clean
Dust, immersion oil and dried media ruin image quality. Clean objectives with lens tissue and approved solvent (oil objectives need naphtha or xylene for old oil). Never twist the coarse focus while an oil objective touches the slide — it is the fastest way to crack a coverslip and damage the front lens.