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Long time-lapse nanoscopy with spontaneously blinking membrane probes.

Citation
Takakura, H., et al. “Long Time-Lapse Nanoscopy With Spontaneously Blinking Membrane Probes.”. Nature Biotechnology, pp. 773-780.
Center Yale University
Author Hideo Takakura, Yongdeng Zhang, Roman S Erdmann, Alexander D Thompson, Yu Lin, Brian McNellis, Felix Rivera-Molina, Shin-Nosuke Uno, Mako Kamiya, Yasuteru Urano, James E Rothman, Joerg Bewersdorf, Alanna Schepartz, Derek Toomre
Abstract

Imaging cellular structures and organelles in living cells by long time-lapse super-resolution microscopy is challenging, as it requires dense labeling, bright and highly photostable dyes, and non-toxic conditions. We introduce a set of high-density, environment-sensitive (HIDE) membrane probes, based on the membrane-permeable silicon-rhodamine dye HMSiR, that assemble in situ and enable long time-lapse, live-cell nanoscopy of discrete cellular structures and organelles with high spatiotemporal resolution. HIDE-enabled nanoscopy movies span tens of minutes, whereas movies obtained with labeled proteins span tens of seconds. Our data reveal 2D dynamics of the mitochondria, plasma membrane and filopodia, and the 2D and 3D dynamics of the endoplasmic reticulum, in living cells. HIDE probes also facilitate acquisition of live-cell, two-color, super-resolution images, expanding the utility of nanoscopy to visualize dynamic processes and structures in living cells.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Nature biotechnology
Volume
35
Issue
8
Number of Pages
773-780
Date Published
08/2017
ISSN Number
1546-1696
DOI
10.1038/nbt.3876
Alternate Journal
Nat. Biotechnol.
PMID
28671662
PMCID
PMC5609855
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