| Literature DB >> 26124194 |
Martin Booth1, Débora Andrade2, Daniel Burke2, Brian Patton2, Mantas Zurauskas2.
Abstract
As one of the most powerful tools in the biological investigation of cellular structures and dynamic processes, fluorescence microscopy has undergone extraordinary developments in the past decades. The advent of super-resolution techniques has enabled fluorescence microscopy - or rather nanoscopy - to achieve nanoscale resolution in living specimens and unravelled the interior of cells with unprecedented detail. The methods employed in this expanding field of microscopy, however, are especially prone to the detrimental effects of optical aberrations. In this review, we discuss how super-resolution microscopy techniques based upon single-molecule switching, stimulated emission depletion and structured illumination each suffer from aberrations in different ways that are dependent upon intrinsic technical aspects. We discuss the use of adaptive optics as an effective means to overcome this problem.Entities:
Keywords: aberrations; adaptive optics; single-molecule switching; stimulated emission depletion; structured illumination; super-resolution microscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26124194 PMCID: PMC4711293 DOI: 10.1093/jmicro/dfv033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microscopy (Oxf) ISSN: 2050-5698 Impact factor: 1.571
Fig. 1.Aberration correction in a SMS microscope. (a) Principle of image-based optimization. For each mode used in the aberration correction procedure, different amplitudes are applied and their correspondent metric value is computed. Fitting of the resulting curve provides the coefficient that maximizes the metric and thus corrects the aberration mode. (b) 3D STORM image of Alexa 647-labelled microtubules obtained using the astigmatism method without aberration correction. (c) 3D STORM image of the same structure when aberrations were corrected; a significant increase in accepted fits is observed. In b and c, the images were taken 6 µm deep into the cell, and the z position is represented by the colour scale. (Images reproduced with permission from Ref. [14].) In b and c, scale bars are 1 µm.
Fig. 2.Effect of aberrations on STED microscopy. (i) Calculations of the effect of coma in the focal plane of STED depletion profiles. (a and b) Ideal focal plane intensity distributions of STED beams. (c and d) Focal plane intensity distributions of STED beams, where coma affects the shape of the PSF. (ii) Calculations of the effect of primary spherical aberration in the xz plane of STED depletion profiles. (a and b) Ideal focal plane intensity distributions of STED beams. (c and d) Focal plane intensity distributions of STED beams, where primary spherical aberration affects the shape of the PSF. (iii) Experimental demonstration of AO for STED microscopy. (a and b) Respectively, confocal and 3D STED images of Atto647N-labelled synaptic boutons of dopaminergic neurons located 15 µm into a Drosophila brain, without aberration correction. (c and d) Respectively, confocal and 3D STED images of the same structures as in (iii) a and b with aberration correction. In all images, scale bars are 1 µm.
Fig. 3.Effect of aberrations on SIM. (a) Schematic of the principles of SIM. (b) Schematic showing how aberrations in the illumination pattern are equivalent to an offset in the spatial coordinates of the intensity focal distribution. In these examples, coma creates a lateral shift equivalent to tilt; spherical aberration shifts along the axis in the same way as defocus.