Extended-resolution structured illumination imaging of endocytic and cytoskeletal dynamics

Dong Li(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Lin Shao(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Bi‐Chang Chen(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Xi Zhang(Central China Normal University), Mingshu Zhang(Institute of Biophysics), Brian T. Moses(Coleman University), Daniel E. Milkie(Coleman University), Jordan R. Beach(National Institutes of Health), John A. Hammer(National Institutes of Health), Mithun Pasham(Boston Children's Hospital), Tomas Kirchhausen(Boston Children's Hospital), Michelle A. Baird(Florida State University), Michael W. Davidson(Florida State University), Pingyong Xu(Institute of Biophysics), Eric Betzig(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Science
August 27, 2015
Cited by 768

Abstract

Super-resolution fluorescence microscopy is distinct among nanoscale imaging tools in its ability to image protein dynamics in living cells. Structured illumination microscopy (SIM) stands out in this regard because of its high speed and low illumination intensities, but typically offers only a twofold resolution gain. We extended the resolution of live-cell SIM through two approaches: ultrahigh numerical aperture SIM at 84-nanometer lateral resolution for more than 100 multicolor frames, and nonlinear SIM with patterned activation at 45- to 62-nanometer resolution for approximately 20 to 40 frames. We applied these approaches to image dynamics near the plasma membrane of spatially resolved assemblies of clathrin and caveolin, Rab5a in early endosomes, and α-actinin, often in relationship to cortical actin. In addition, we examined mitochondria, actin, and the Golgi apparatus dynamics in three dimensions.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis