Literature DB >> 21181715

Potential of ultraviolet wide-field imaging and multiphoton microscopy for analysis of dehydroergosterol in cellular membranes.

Daniel Wüstner1, Jonathan R Brewer, Luis Bagatolli, Daniel Sage.   

Abstract

Dehydroergosterol (DHE) is an intrinsically fluorescent sterol with absorption/emission in the ultraviolet (UV) region and biophysical properties similar to those of cholesterol. We compared the potential of UV-sensitive low-light-level wide-field (UV-WF) imaging with that of multiphoton (MP) excitation microscopy to monitor DHE in living cells. Significantly reduced photobleaching in MP microscopy of DHE enabled us to acquire three-dimensional z-stacks of DHE-stained cells and to obtain high-resolution maps of DHE in surface ruffles, nanotubes, and the apical membrane of epithelial cells. We found that the lateral resolution of MP microscopy is ∼1.5-fold higher than that of UV-WF deconvolution microscopy, allowing for improved spatiotemporal analysis of plasma membrane sterol distribution. Surface intensity patterns of DHE with a diameter of 0.2 μm persisting over several minutes could be resolved by MP time-lapse microscopy. Diffusion coefficients of 0.25-μm-diameter endocytic vesicles containing DHE were determined by MP spatiotemporal image correlation spectroscopy. The requirement of extremely high laser power for visualization of DHE by MP microscopy made this method less potent for multicolor applications with organelle markers like green fluorescent protein-tagged proteins. The signal-to-noise ratio obtainable by UV-WF imaging could be significantly improved by pixelwise bleach rate fitting and calculation of an amplitude image from the decay model and by frame averaging after pixelwise bleaching correction of the image stacks. We conclude that UV-WF imaging and MP microscopy of DHE provide complementary information regarding membrane distribution and intracellular targeting of sterols.
© 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21181715     DOI: 10.1002/jemt.20878

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microsc Res Tech        ISSN: 1059-910X            Impact factor:   2.769


  4 in total

1.  Multicolor bleach-rate imaging enlightens in vivo sterol transport.

Authors:  Daniel Wüstner; Daniel Sage
Journal:  Commun Integr Biol       Date:  2010-07

2.  Analysis of cholesterol trafficking with fluorescent probes.

Authors:  Frederick R Maxfield; Daniel Wüstner
Journal:  Methods Cell Biol       Date:  2012       Impact factor: 1.441

3.  Two-photon time-lapse microscopy of BODIPY-cholesterol reveals anomalous sterol diffusion in chinese hamster ovary cells.

Authors:  Frederik W Lund; Michael A Lomholt; Lukasz M Solanko; Robert Bittman; Daniel Wüstner
Journal:  BMC Biophys       Date:  2012-10-18       Impact factor: 4.778

Review 4.  Fluorescent Sterols and Cholesteryl Esters as Probes for Intracellular Cholesterol Transport.

Authors:  Katarzyna A Solanko; Maciej Modzel; Lukasz M Solanko; Daniel Wüstner
Journal:  Lipid Insights       Date:  2016-06-09
  4 in total

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