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New microscopy method with nanometer resolution

29.03.2021 - MINSTED resolves fluorescent molecules with resolution at the nanometer scale.

Scientists working with Stefan Hell at the Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry in Göttingen and the Heidelberg-based MPI for Medical Research have developed another light microscopy method, called MINSTED, which resolves fluores­cently labeled details with molecular sharpness. With MINSTED, Nobel laureate Hell has come full circle. “A good 20 years ago, we funda­mentally broke the diffrac­tion resolution limit of fluores­cence micro­scopy with STED. Until then, that was considered impossible,” says Hell. “Back then we dreamed: With STED we want to become so good that one day we will be able to separate individual molecules that are only a few nano­meters apart. Now we've succeeded.” At that time, the STED principle amounted to a revo­lution in light microscopy.

 

In its original version, STED microscopy achieved a resolution of 20 to 30 nanometers and was thus around ten times sharper than the light micro­scopes available up to that point. In 2016, Hell and his coworkers were able to further increase the reso­lution tenfold through MINFLUX nanoscopy. In that new approach, they combined an element from the STED principle with one from another light micro­scopic technique, PALM/STORM, and thus achieved a resolution of just a few nanometers for the first time. MINFLUX can truly make fluorescent molecules visible on molecular scales – it does not get any sharper.

Hell was convinced that MINFLUX would not remain the only molecular resolution method, but rather would represent the first member of a new family of techniques with this level of detail. With MINSTED, he and his coworkers are now showing this to be true. As the name suggests, MINSTED relies on the original STED principle even more than MINFLUX. Ela­borating on this, Michael Weber, a PhD student in Hell’s labora­tory and one of the developers of MINSTED, says: “This has advantages. Like MINFLUX, it achieves molecular resolution, but the background noise is lower. In addition, the resolution can now be adjusted almost conti­nuously from 200 nanometers down to the molecular size – 1 nanometer.”

With MINSTED, Hell is building on his break­through with STED more than 20 years ago and is extracting the full potential from this concept. “Micro­scopy on the molecular scale is here to stay. It is to be expected that MINSTED and MINFLUX will become widely used in the life sciences,” says the physicist. STED achieved what was previously unat­tainable, separately detecting molecules less than 200 nanometers apart, with a trick: Neigh­boring fluores­cent features or molecules are switched on and off one after the other. To do this, a laser beam that excites the molecules is imme­diately followed by a second one, the STED beam, which prevents the mole­cules from fluorescing.

The STED beam, however, has a hole in the middle. In other words, it is donut-shaped. Only the molecules in the middle of this donut beam can fluoresce. Thus, one always knows where the emitting molecules are. In practice, STED does not achieve molecular reso­lution because the donut-shaped fluores­cence inhi­bition beam cannot be made so strong that only a single molecule can fit into the hole. For this reason in MINSTED, the fluorescent molecules are ini­tially isolated by randomly switching them on through an inde­pendent photo­chemical switching process, rather than by the donut beam itself.

The fluores­cence-preventing STED donut beam is then used to locate the fluorescent molecules individually. Its hole serves as a reference point. “If the hole coincides with the molecule, the molecule glows most strongly and you can figure out precisely where it is, because the exact position of the STED donut beam is always known,” says Marcel Leutenegger, a post­doctoral researcher in Hell's department. “That’s why we gradually approach the molecules in a targeted fashion with the donut beam and can thus locate the fluorescent molecules with an accuracy of 1 to 3 nanometers, that is, the size of the molecules. In connection with the photo­chemical on and off switching, the resolution becomes mole­cular-scale.” (Source: MPI bpc)

Reference: M. Weber et al.: MINSTED fluorescence localization and nanoscopy, Nat. Phot., online 15. März 2021; DOI: 10.1038/s41566-021-00774-2

Link: NanoBiophotonics (S. Hell), Max-Planck-Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Göttingen, Germany

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