Superresolution size determination in fluorescence microscopy: A comparison between spatially modulated illumination and confocal laser scanning microscopy
- 15 June 2004
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Applied Physics
- Vol. 95 (12) , 8436-8443
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1751633
Abstract
Recently developed far field light optical methods are a powerful tool to analyze biological nanostructures and their dynamics, in particular including the interior of three-dimensionally conserved cells. In this article, the recently described method of spatially modulated illumination (SMI) microscopy has been further extended to the online determination of the extension of small, subwavelength sized, fluorescent objects (nanosizing). Using fluorescence excitation with 488 nm, the determination of fluorescent labeled object diameters down to 40 nm corresponding to about 1/12th of the wavelength used for one-photon excitation could be shown. The results of the SMI nanosizing procedure for a detailed, systematic variation of the object diameter are presented together with a fast algorithm for online size evaluation. In addition, we show a direct comparison of the diameter of “colocalization volumes” between SMI nanosizing and conventional confocal laser scanning microscopy.This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Measuring the Size of Biological Nanostructures with Spatially Modulated Illumination MicroscopyMolecular Biology of the Cell, 2004
- Nanostructure Analysis Using Spatially Modulated Illumination MicroscopyComplexus, 2003
- Focal Spots of SizeOpen Up Far-Field Florescence Microscopy at 33 nm Axial ResolutionPhysical Review Letters, 2002
- Spatially modulated illumination microscopy: online visualization of intensity distribution and prediction of nanometer precision of axial distance measurements by computer simulationsJournal of Biomedical Optics, 2001
- 3-Dimensional super-resolution by spectrally selective imagingChemical Physics Letters, 1998
- Structure and Function in the NucleusScience, 1998
- High‐precision distance measurements and volume‐conserving segmentation of objects near and below the resolution limit in three‐dimensional confocal fluorescence microscopyJournal of Microscopy, 1998
- Karyotyping human chromosomes by combinatorial multi-fluor FISHNature Genetics, 1996
- Enhancement of axial resolution in fluorescence microscopy by standing-wave excitationNature, 1993
- Role of Chromosome Territories in the Functional Compartmentalization of the Cell NucleusCold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 1993