Nanocharacterization
plays a vital role in understanding the complex
nanoscale organization of cells and organelles. Understanding cellular
function requires high-resolution information about how the cellular
structures evolve over time. A number of techniques exist to resolve
static nanoscale structure of cells in great detail (super-resolution
optical microscopy, EM, AFM). However, time-resolved imaging techniques
tend to either have a lower resolution, are limited to small areas,
or cause damage to the cells, thereby preventing long-term time-lapse
studies. Scanning probe microscopy methods such as atomic force microscopy
(AFM) combine high-resolution imaging with the ability to image living
cells in physiological conditions. The mechanical contact between
the tip and the sample, however, deforms the cell surface, disturbs
the native state, and prohibits long-term time-lapse imaging. Here,
we develop a scanning ion conductance microscope (SICM) for high-speed
and long-term nanoscale imaging of eukaryotic cells. By utilizing
advances in nanopositioning, nanopore fabrication, microelectronics,
and controls engineering, we developed a microscopy method that can
resolve spatiotemporally diverse three-dimensional (3D) processes
on the cell membrane at sub-5-nm axial resolution. We tracked dynamic
changes in live cell morphology with nanometer details and temporal
ranges of subsecond to days, imaging diverse processes ranging from
endocytosis, micropinocytosis, and mitosis to bacterial infection
and cell differentiation in cancer cells. This technique enables a
detailed look at membrane events and may offer insights into cell–cell
interactions for infection, immunology, and cancer research.
High-resolution live-cell imaging is necessary to study complex biological phenomena. Modern fluorescence microscopy methods are increasingly combined with complementary, label-free techniques to put the fluorescence information into the cellular context. The most common high-resolution imaging approaches used in combination with fluorescence imaging are electron microscopy and atomic-force microscopy (AFM), originally developed for solid-state material characterization. AFM routinely resolves atomic steps, however on soft biological samples, the forces between the tip and the sample deform the fragile membrane, thereby distorting the otherwise high axial resolution of the technique. Here we present scanning ion-conductance microscopy (SICM) as an alternative approach for topographical imaging of soft biological samples, preserving high axial resolution on cells. SICM is complemented with live-cell compatible super-resolution optical fluctuation imaging (SOFI). To demonstrate the capabilities of our method we show correlative 3D cellular maps with SOFI implementation in both 2D and 3D with self-blinking dyes for two-color high-order SOFI imaging. Finally, we employ correlative SICM/SOFI microscopy for visualizing actin dynamics in live COS-7 cells with subdiffraction-resolution.
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