MINFLUX nanoscopy and related matters

TYPEColloquium
Speaker:Stefan W. Hell
Affiliation:Max Planck Institute, Goettingen
Date:22.03.2021
Time:16:00 - 17:00
LocationZoom
Remark:IPC colloquium
Abstract:

I will show how an in-depth description of the basic principles of diffraction-unlimited fluorescence microscopy (nanoscopy) [1-3] has spawned a new powerful superresolution concept, namely MINFLUX nanoscopy [4]. MINFLUX utilizes a local excitation intensity minimum (of a doughnut or a standing wave) that is targeted like a probe in order to localize the fluorescent molecule to be registered. In combination with single-molecule switching for sequential registration, MINFLUX [4-6] has obtained the ultimate (super)resolution: the size of a molecule. MINFLUX nanoscopy, providing 13 nanometer resolution in fixed and living cells, is presently being established for routine fluorescence imaging at the highest, molecular-size resolution levels. Relying on fewer detected photons than popular camera-based localization, MINFLUX nanoscopy is poised to open a new chapter in the imaging of protein complexes and distributions in fixed and living cells.

 

  1. [1]  Hell, S.W., Wichmann, J. Breaking the diffraction resolution limit by stimulated emission: stimulated-emission- depletion fluorescence microscopy. Opt. Lett. 19, 780-782 (1994).

  2. [2]  Hell, S.W. Far-Field Optical Nanoscopy. Science 316, 1153-1158 (2007).

  3. [3]  Hell, S.W. Microscopy and its focal switch. Nat. Methods 6, 24-32 (2009).

  4. [4]  Balzarotti, F., Eilers, Y., Gwosch, K. C., Gynnå, A. H., Westphal, V., Stefani, F. D., Elf, J., Hell, S.W. Nanometer resolution

    imaging and tracking of fluorescent molecules with minimal photon fluxes. Science 355, 606-612 (2017).

  5. [5]  Eilers, Y., Ta, H., Gwosch, K. C., Balzarotti, F., Hell, S. W. MINFLUX monitors rapid molecular jumps with superior

    spatiotemporal resolution. PNAS 115, 6117-6122 (2018).

  6. [6]  Gwosch, K. C., Pape, J. K., Balzarotti, F., Hoess, P., Ellenberg, J., Ries, J., Hell, S. W. MINFLUX nanoscopy delivers

    multicolor nanometer 3D-resolution in (living) cells. (bioRxiv, doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/734251)