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Multimodal single-molecule microscopy with continuously controlled spectral resolution.


ABSTRACT: Color is a fundamental contrast mechanism in fluorescence microscopy, providing the basis for numerous imaging and spectroscopy techniques. Building on spectral imaging schemes that encode color into a fixed spatial intensity distribution, here, we introduce continuously controlled spectral-resolution (CoCoS) microscopy, which allows the spectral resolution of the system to be adjusted in real-time. By optimizing the spectral resolution for each experiment, we achieve maximal sensitivity and throughput, allowing for single-frame acquisition of multiple color channels with single-molecule sensitivity and 140-fold larger fields of view compared with previous super-resolution spectral imaging techniques. Here, we demonstrate the utility of CoCoS in three experimental formats, single-molecule spectroscopy, single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer, and multicolor single-particle tracking in live neurons, using a range of samples and 12 distinct fluorescent markers. A simple add-on allows CoCoS to be integrated into existing fluorescence microscopes, rendering spectral imaging accessible to the wider scientific community.

SUBMITTER: Jeffet J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9680784 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Multimodal single-molecule microscopy with continuously controlled spectral resolution.

Jeffet Jonathan J   Ionescu Ariel A   Michaeli Yael Y   Torchinsky Dmitry D   Perlson Eran E   Craggs Timothy D TD   Ebenstein Yuval Y  

Biophysical reports 20210806 1


Color is a fundamental contrast mechanism in fluorescence microscopy, providing the basis for numerous imaging and spectroscopy techniques. Building on spectral imaging schemes that encode color into a fixed spatial intensity distribution, here, we introduce continuously controlled spectral-resolution (CoCoS) microscopy, which allows the spectral resolution of the system to be adjusted in real-time. By optimizing the spectral resolution for each experiment, we achieve maximal sensitivity and thr  ...[more]

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