Hess Samuel T, Girirajan Thanu P K, Mason Michael D
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469, USA.
Biophys J. 2006 Dec 1;91(11):4258-72. doi: 10.1529/biophysj.106.091116. Epub 2006 Sep 15.
Biological structures span many orders of magnitude in size, but far-field visible light microscopy suffers from limited resolution. A new method for fluorescence imaging has been developed that can obtain spatial distributions of large numbers of fluorescent molecules on length scales shorter than the classical diffraction limit. Fluorescence photoactivation localization microscopy (FPALM) analyzes thousands of single fluorophores per acquisition, localizing small numbers of them at a time, at low excitation intensity. To control the number of visible fluorophores in the field of view and ensure that optically active molecules are separated by much more than the width of the point spread function, photoactivatable fluorescent molecules are used, in this case the photoactivatable green fluorescent protein (PA-GFP). For these photoactivatable molecules, the activation rate is controlled by the activation illumination intensity; nonfluorescent inactive molecules are activated by a high-frequency (405-nm) laser and are then fluorescent when excited at a lower frequency. The fluorescence is imaged by a CCD camera, and then the molecules are either reversibly inactivated or irreversibly photobleached to remove them from the field of view. The rate of photobleaching is controlled by the intensity of the laser used to excite the fluorescence, in this case an Ar+ ion laser. Because only a small number of molecules are visible at a given time, their positions can be determined precisely; with only approximately 100 detected photons per molecule, the localization precision can be as much as 10-fold better than the resolution, depending on background levels. Heterogeneities on length scales of the order of tens of nanometers are observed by FPALM of PA-GFP on glass. FPALM images are compared with images of the same molecules by widefield fluorescence. FPALM images of PA-GFP on a terraced sapphire crystal surface were compared with atomic force microscopy and show that the full width at half-maximum of features approximately 86 +/- 4 nm is significantly better than the expected diffraction-limited optical resolution. The number of fluorescent molecules and their brightness distribution have also been determined using FPALM. This new method suggests a means to address a significant number of biological questions that had previously been limited by microscope resolution.
生物结构在大小上跨越多个数量级,但远场可见光显微镜的分辨率有限。一种新的荧光成像方法已被开发出来,它能够在比经典衍射极限更短的长度尺度上获得大量荧光分子的空间分布。荧光光激活定位显微镜(FPALM)每次采集分析数千个单个荧光团,在低激发强度下一次定位少量荧光团。为了控制视野中可见荧光团的数量,并确保光学活性分子之间的间隔远大于点扩散函数的宽度,使用了可光激活的荧光分子,在这种情况下是可光激活的绿色荧光蛋白(PA-GFP)。对于这些可光激活分子,激活速率由激活照明强度控制;非荧光的非活性分子由高频(405纳米)激光激活,然后在较低频率激发时发出荧光。荧光由电荷耦合器件(CCD)相机成像,然后分子要么被可逆地失活,要么被不可逆地光漂白,以将它们从视野中去除。光漂白速率由用于激发荧光的激光强度控制,在这种情况下是氩离子激光。由于在给定时间只有少量分子可见,它们的位置可以精确确定;每个分子仅检测到约100个光子时,定位精度比分辨率高约10倍,这取决于背景水平。通过在玻璃上对PA-GFP进行FPALM观察到了几十纳米量级的长度尺度上的异质性。将PA-GFP的FPALM图像与通过宽场荧光得到的相同分子的图像进行比较。将PA-GFP在梯田状蓝宝石晶体表面的FPALM图像与原子力显微镜图像进行比较,结果表明,约86±4纳米特征的半高宽明显优于预期的衍射极限光学分辨率。还使用FPALM确定了荧光分子的数量及其亮度分布。这种新方法为解决大量以前受显微镜分辨率限制的生物学问题提供了一种手段。