| Literature DB >> 24062977 |
Alexander Harder1, Mareike Dieding, Volker Walhorn, Sven Degenhard, Andreas Brodehl, Christina Wege, Hendrik Milting, Dario Anselmetti.
Abstract
Both fluorescence imaging and atomic force microscopy (AFM) are highly versatile and extensively used in applications ranging from nanotechnology to life sciences. In fluorescence microscopy luminescent dyes serve as position markers. Moreover, they can be used as active reporters of their local vicinity. The dipolar coupling of the tip with the incident light and the fluorophore give rise to a local field and fluorescence enhancement. AFM topographic imaging allows for resolutions down to the atomic scale. It can be operated in vacuum, under ambient conditions and in liquids. This makes it ideal for the investigation of a wide range of different samples. Furthermore an illuminated AFM cantilever tip apex exposes strongly confined non-propagating electromagnetic fields that can serve as a coupling agent for single dye molecules. Thus, combining both techniques by means of apertureless scanning near-field optical microscopy (aSNOM) enables concurrent high resolution topography and fluorescence imaging. Commonly, among the various (apertureless) SNOM approaches metallic or metallized probes are used. Here, we report on our custom-built aSNOM setup, which uses commercially available monolithic silicon AFM cantilevers. The field enhancement confined to the tip apex facilitates an optical resolution down to 20 nm. Furthermore, the use of standard mass-produced AFM cantilevers spares elaborate probe production or modification processes. We investigated tobacco mosaic viruses and the intermediate filament protein desmin. Both are mixed complexes of building blocks, which are fluorescently labeled to a low degree. The simultaneous recording of topography and fluorescence data allows for the exact localization of distinct building blocks within the superordinate structures.Entities:
Keywords: apertureless scanning near-field optical microscope; atomic force microscopy; fluorescence microscopy
Year: 2013 PMID: 24062977 PMCID: PMC3778390 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.4.60
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1AFM topography scans of desmin filaments under ambient conditions. a) Filaments assembled from wild-type proteins are several micrometers long and expose a vague right handed twist. b) Filaments assembled from mutated desmin protein (deletion mutation p.E114del, for details see [22]) are significantly shorter and show a completely different surface morphology. c) Assembly model of type II intermediate filaments [24]. Desmin monomers associate to parallel coiled coil dimers. Dimers form antiparallel tetramers which assemble to unit length filaments (ULF). Filaments elongate by longitudinal assembly of ULF.
Figure 2a) Scheme of the experimental setup. b) The sample illumination and fluorescence readout is correlated with the cantilever position. The far-field readout is triggered at the upper reversal point of the cantilever whereas the near-field data is recorded at the lower reversal point.
Figure 3aSNOM dataset of TMV (a–c, 5×5 µm2). a) Blurry far-field fluorescence acquired at the upper reversal point of the oscillating cantilever. b) The raw near-field fluorescence was recorded at the lower reversal point of the cantilever. The near-field contribution is located at the center of the dim stray fluorescence. c) The plain near-field fluorescence data is superimposed on the AFM topography. The marked areas are magnified for better visibility. All scale bars indicate 500 nm.
Figure 4aSnom data of fluorescently labeled desmin filaments. a) Combined fluorescence and topography dataset of wild type desmin. b) Fluorescence intensity cross sections of two adjacent fluorophores are extracted to estimate the optical resolution. The peaks are approximated by a Gaussian distribution to determine the FWHM. c,d) The marked areas are magnified for better visibility. All scale bars indicate 500 nm.
Figure 5Histogram of the FWHM of fluorescence peaks obtained from labeled desmin filaments.