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Reporters, Markers, Dyes, Nanoparticles, and Molecular Probes for Biomedical Applications III

DOI: 10.1117/12.881221

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STED Super-resolution Microscopy in Drosophila Tissue and in Mammalian Cells

Journal article published in 2011 by Lana Lau, Yin Loon Lee ORCID, Maja Matis ORCID, Jeff Axelrod, Tim Stearns, W. E. Moerner
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Far-field super-resolution microscopy is a rapidly emerging method that is opening up opportunities for biological imaging beyond the optical diffraction limit. We have implemented a Stimulated Emission Depletion (STED) microscope to image single dye, cell, and tissue samples with 50–80 nm resolution. First, we compare the STED performance imaging single molecules of several common dyes and report a novel STED dye. Then we apply STED to image planar cell polarity protein complexes in intact fixed Drosophila tissue for the first time. Finally, we present a preliminary study of the centrosomal protein Cep164 in mammalian cells. Our images suggest that Cep164 is arranged in a nine-fold symmetric pattern around the centriole, consistent with findings suggested by cryoelectron tomography. Our work demonstrates that STED microscopy can be used for superresolution imaging in intact tissue and provides ultrastructural information in biological samples as an alternative to immuno-electron microscopy.