Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

A number of new Correlative Light and Electron Microscopy approaches have been developed over the past years, offering the opportunity to combine the specificity and bio-compatibility of light microscopy with the high resolution achieved in electron microscopy. More recently, these approaches have taken one step further and also super-resolution light microscopy was combined with transmission or scanning electron microscopy. This combination usually requires moving the specimen between different imaging systems, an expensive set-up and relatively complicated imaging workflows. Here we present a way to overcome these difficulties by exploiting a commercially available wide-field fluorescence microscope integrated in the specimen chamber of a Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) to perform correlative LM/EM studies. Super-resolution light microscopy was achieved by using a recently developed algorithm - the Super-Resolution Radial Fluctuations (SRRF) - to improve the resolution of diffraction limited fluorescent images. With this combination of hardware/software it is possible to obtain correlative super-resolution light and scanning electron microscopy images in an easy and fast way. The imaging workflow is described and demonstrated on fluorescently labelled amyloid fibrils, fibrillar protein aggregates linked to the onset of multiple neurodegenerative diseases, revealing information about their polymorphism.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6820765PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-52047-2DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

super-resolution light
16
light microscopy
16
electron microscopy
16
scanning electron
12
microscopy
8
microscopy approaches
8
electron
6
light
6
super-resolution
5
easy path
4

Similar Publications

Turn-on type fluorescent photochromism of a diarylmaleimide-S,S,S',S'-tetraoxide.

Photochem Photobiol Sci

September 2025

Faculity of Engineering, Yokohama National University, 79-5, Tokiwadai, Hodogaya, Yokohama, Kanagawa, 240-8501, Japan.

In recent years, fluorescence-switchable molecules have garnered significant attention as fluorescent dyes for super-resolution fluorescence microscopy, which is increasingly demanded in the field of biochemical imaging. Among such molecules, diarylethene-S,S,S',S'-tetraoxide derivatives have proven particularly promising due to their ability to achieve high contrast fluorescence switching. Diarylethenes incorporating perfluorocyclopentene as the ethene bridge have become the standard scaffold due to their excellent fatigue resistance and thermal stability.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Three-dimensional structured illumination microscopy (3DSIM) is an essential super-resolution imaging technique for visualizing volumetric subcellular structures at the nanoscale, capable of doubling both lateral and axial resolution beyond the diffraction limit. However, high-quality 3DSIM reconstruction is often hindered by uncertainties in experimental parameters, such as optical aberrations and fluorescence density heterogeneity. Here, we present PCA-3DSIM, a novel 3DSIM reconstruction framework that extends principal component analysis (PCA) from two-dimensional (2D) to three-dimensional (3D) super-resolution microscopy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Understanding the intracellular fate of nanoparticles (NPs) is essential for advancing nanomedicine, particularly in targeted drug delivery for cancer therapy. Here, we present a complementary cryogenic microscopy workflow across scales to investigate the uptake and subcellular localization of zirconyl-containing inorganic-organic hybrid nanoparticles (IOH-NPs) in murine breast cancer cells. Our approach integrates cryogenic fluorescence microscopy (cryo-FM), cryo-focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy (cryo-FIBSEM), and cryo-soft X-ray tomography (cryo-SXT), enabling molecular specificity, high-resolution imaging, and volumetric ultrastructural analysis in near-native cellular states.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Weakly scattering samples such as low-refractive-index nanomaterials present significant challenges in super-resolution imaging, because their weak scattering signals are difficult to distinguish from background noise. Here, we propose microsphere-enhanced evanescent light illumination microscopy (MS-EIM) for the label-free super-resolution imaging of weakly scattering samples. We used the MS-EIM method to perform simulated imaging of transparent samples with a 100-nm gap to investigate its imaging performance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Artificial intelligence is driving speckle-based wavelength measurement toward higher resolution. However, most reported wavelength resolutions have yet to surpass the minimum tuning interval (MTI) of the reference light sources utilized in experiments. In this study, we develop a compact convolutional neural network, MiniConvNet, for direct wavelength regression, aiming to transcend the hardware's accessible resolution limit.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF