“…They overcome a number of the optical performance limitations of organic fluorophores, including low brightness and low photostability, due to the highly rigid aluminosilicate core surrounding the encapsulated dye, resulting in both increased radiative and decreased non-radiative rates. , In recent work, it was discovered that the four-fold coordinated aluminum in the aluminosilicate core of aC′ dots, along with oxygen naturally dissolved in aqueous solutions, induces optical blinking across a range of encapsulated dyes, likely via photoinduced redox processes, under simple imaging conditions that do not require an additional UV activation laser, cytotoxic thiolated compounds, or oxygen scavengers . This low ON–OFF duty cycle (ratio of “on” time over collection time) optical blinking enables optical super-resolution microscopy (SRM), for example in the form of stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM), to resolve features below the diffraction limit of visible light. , Furthermore, the enhanced brightness and photostability of aC′ dots relative to their parent dyes make it possible to achieve higher resolutions in STORM reconstructions, based on durable higher photon counts per blink/localization. , Finally, conjugating a sensor dye to the PEG-shell of aC′ dots has subsequently been demonstrated to allow SRM-enhanced ratiometric sensing of metabolic parameters within cells, adding another powerful functionality to these multifunctional optical SRM probes . In order to add highly specific (e.g., intracellular) targeting and immunofluorescent labeling capabilities to this platform, there is a clear need to develop robust protocols allowing efficient conjugation of Abs to the aC′ dot surface.…”