“…In comparison, identically labeled phosphatidylethanolamine appeared to diffuse freely in the membrane (Eggeling et al, 2009), which implied that lipid-cytoskeleton interactions were not responsible for the anomalous cholesterol-dependent sphingolipid diffusion. Noteworthy, this finding of unhindered phosphatidylethanolamine diffusion conflicts with a previous single molecule tracking study (Fujiwara et al, 2002), and subsequent STED-FCS and single molecule tracking studies reported by these authors and others (Andrade et al, 2015; Fujiwara et al, 2016; Komura et al, 2016). Although, the authors of the STED study never concluded that the cholesterol-dependent trapping of sphingomyelin, GM1 and GPI-anchored proteins was indicative of tiny lipid rafts, their results were often cited by others as support for the lipid raft hypothesis (Lingwood and Simons, 2010; Levental and Veatch, 2016).…”