The Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) gene from the fluorescent jellyfish Aequorea victoria, and its variants (such as EGFP), are used extensively to study the location and timing of gene expression in transgenic animals and plants (Chalfie et al, 1994). Resultant GFP fusion proteins are especially well-suited to studying in vivo gene expression patterns in the transparent nematode, C. elegans and the transparent larva of the fly D. melanogaster. Perhaps one of the most significant limitations to its use in large-scale genetic screens is the high cost of equipment needed to observe GFP microscopically - namely the Fluorescence Dissecting Stereomicroscope for screening and picking mutants and upright and inverted epi-fluorescent compound microscopes for more detailed studies. Commercially available Fluorescence Dissecting Stereomicroscopes typically sell in the midrange between US$10,000 and US$20,000. They are offered by only the "high-end" microscope companies, based upon their most expensive dissecting scopes, and incorporate their premium-priced mercury arc-lamp illuminators, power supplies and epi-fluorescence modules. This leads us to wonder whether it is possible to cut corners without sacrificing utility, and which corners can be cut. Since the inception of GFP-based expression screens, a variety of researchers have produced custom-made and home-made GFP dissecting scopes. These include, for example, Welcome Bender (Harvard Medical School, pers. comm.) and Ian Chin-Sang (Chin-Sang, 2004). There are several possibilities to consider toward lowering the cost of a Fluorescence Dissecting Stereomicroscope. It may be possible to get sufficient light from relatively inexpensive, long-lived, lower-power-consuming Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) vs. mercury arc lamps. Depending upon the spectral specificity of the LEDs, filters or dichroic mirrors might be omitted. Getting enough light intensity of the precise wavelengths that excite GFP fluorescence focused onto the sample is important. The exciting beam can be provided directly or focused backward through the microscope using "epi-illumination". We will explore these possibilities and report (and possibly demonstrate) the results. Chin-Sang, Ian. (2004) GFP Stereoscope Using LED light source. Queen''s University, Kingston, ON, Canada.
http://130.15.90.245/gfp_stereoscope.htm.