Super-resolution optical microscopy is a rapidly evolving area of fluorescence microscopy with a tremendous potential for impacting many fields of science. Several super-resolution methods have been developed over the last decade, all capable of overcoming the fundamental diffraction limit of light. We present here an approach for obtaining subdiffraction limit optical resolution in all three dimensions. This method relies on higher-order statistical analysis of temporal fluctuations (caused by fluorescence blinking/ intermittency) recorded in a sequence of images (movie). We demonstrate a 5-fold improvement in spatial resolution by using a conventional wide-field microscope. This resolution enhancement is achieved in iterative discrete steps, which in turn allows the evaluation of images at different resolution levels. Even at the lowest level of resolution enhancement, our method features significant background reduction and thus contrast enhancement and is demonstrated on quantum dot-labeled microtubules of fibroblast cells.cumulants ͉ fluorescence ͉ quantum dots ͉ superresolution microscopy ͉ intermittency
We present a new method to measure absolute diffusion coefficients at nanomolar concentrations with high precision. Based on a modified fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS)-setup, this method is improved by introducing an external ruler for measuring the diffusion time by generating two laterally shifted and overlapping laser foci at a fixed and known distance. Data fitting is facilitated by a new two-parameter model to describe the molecule detection function (MDF). We present a recorded MDF and show the excellent agreement with the fitting model. We measure the diffusion coefficient of the red fluorescent dye Atto655 under various conditions and compare these values with a value achieved by gradient pulsed field NMR (GPF NMR). From these measurements we conclude, that the new measurement scheme is robust against optical and photophysical artefacts which are inherent to standard FCS. With two-focus-FCS, the diffusion coefficient of 4.26 x 10(-6) cm2s(-1) for Atto655 in water at 25 degrees C compares well with the GPF NMR value of 4.28 x 10(-6) cm2s(-1).
Superresolution Optical Fluctuation Imaging (SOFI) as initially demonstrated allows for a resolution enhancement in imaging by a factor of square-root of two. Here, we demonstrate how to increase the resolution of SOFI images by re-weighting the Optical Transfer Function (OTF). Furthermore, we demonstrate how cross-cumulants can be exploited to obtain a fair approximation of the underlying Point-Spread Function. We show a two-fold increase of resolution (over the diffraction limit) of near-infrared quantum dot labeled tubulin-network of 3T3 fibroblasts
Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) has become an important tool for measuring diffusion, concentration, and molecular interactions of cellular components. The interpretation of FCS data critically depends on the measurement set-up. Here, we present a rigorous theory of FCS based on exact wave-optical calculations. Six of the most important optical and photophysical factors that influence FCS are studied: fluorescence anisotropy, cover-slide thickness, refractive index of the sample, laser-beam geometry, optical saturation, and pinhole adjustment. Our theoretical framework represents a general attempt to link all relevant parameters of the experimental set-up with the measured correlation function.
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