空间调制照明显微镜:在核纳米结构分析中的应用前景。

Christoph Cremer, Udo Birk
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引用次数: 3

摘要

数千个基因及其转录的复杂生化网络被包裹在微米大小的细胞核中。为了控制生物化学过程,空间组织起着关键作用。因此,高等生物的细胞核结构已成为先进光学显微镜的一个主要课题。到目前为止,已经应用了多种方法,包括共聚焦激光扫描荧光显微镜,4Pi-, STED-和定位显微镜方法,以及(横向)结构照明显微镜(SIM)。本文综述了空间调制照明(SMI)在核纳米结构分析中的研究进展,并对其应用前景进行了展望。SMI是一种基于宽视场的方法,使用轴向结构照明模式来确定直径小于或等于200纳米到大于或等于40纳米之间的小型光学隔离荧光物体的轴向延伸(尺寸),精度可低至几纳米范围;此外,它允许这种结构的轴向定位到1nm尺度。结合SIM,利用单分子定位显微镜应用中典型的荧光产率,小于或等于1nm的三维定位精度有望成为可能。再加上它的纳米化能力,这可能最终用于分析具有拓扑分辨率的大分子复合物和其他纳米结构,进一步缩小与低温电子显微镜的差距。本文是Theo Murphy会议议题“超分辨率结构照明显微镜(第二部分)”的一部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Spatially modulated illumination microscopy: application perspectives in nuclear nanostructure analysis.

Thousands of genes and the complex biochemical networks for their transcription are packed in the micrometer sized cell nucleus. To control biochemical processes, spatial organization plays a key role. Hence the structure of the cell nucleus of higher organisms has emerged as a main topic of advanced light microscopy. So far, a variety of methods have been applied for this, including confocal laser scanning fluorescence microscopy, 4Pi-, STED- and localization microscopy approaches, as well as (laterally) structured illumination microscopy (SIM). Here, we summarize the state of the art and discuss application perspectives for nuclear nanostructure analysis of spatially modulated illumination (SMI). SMI is a widefield-based approach to using axially structured illumination patterns to determine the axial extension (size) of small, optically isolated fluorescent objects between less than or equal to 200 nm and greater than or equal to 40 nm diameter with a precision down to the few nm range; in addition, it allows the axial positioning of such structures down to the 1 nm scale. Combined with SIM, a three-dimensional localization precision of less than or equal to 1 nm is expected to become feasible using fluorescence yields typical for single molecule localization microscopy applications. Together with its nanosizing capability, this may eventually be used to analyse macromolecular complexes and other nanostructures with a topological resolution, further narrowing the gap to Cryoelectron microscopy. This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue 'Super-resolution structured illumination microscopy (part 2)'.

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