| Literature DB >> 26975883 |
Yu Shrike Zhang1,2,3, Jae-Byum Chang4, Mario Moisés Alvarez1,2,5,6, Grissel Trujillo-de Santiago1,2,5,6, Julio Aleman1,2, Byambaa Batzaya1,2, Vaishali Krishnadoss1,2,7, Aishwarya Aravamudhan Ramanujam1,2,7, Mehdi Kazemzadeh-Narbat1,2, Fei Chen8, Paul W Tillberg9, Mehmet Remzi Dokmeci1,2,3, Edward S Boyden4,8,10,11,12, Ali Khademhosseini1,2,3,13,14.
Abstract
To date, much effort has been expended on making high-performance microscopes through better instrumentation. Recently, it was discovered that physical magnification of specimens was possible, through a technique called expansion microscopy (ExM), raising the question of whether physical magnification, coupled to inexpensive optics, could together match the performance of high-end optical equipment, at a tiny fraction of the price. Here we show that such "hybrid microscopy" methods--combining physical and optical magnifications--can indeed achieve high performance at low cost. By physically magnifying objects, then imaging them on cheap miniature fluorescence microscopes ("mini-microscopes"), it is possible to image at a resolution comparable to that previously attainable only with benchtop microscopes that present costs orders of magnitude higher. We believe that this unprecedented hybrid technology that combines expansion microscopy, based on physical magnification, and mini-microscopy, relying on conventional optics--a process we refer to as Expansion Mini-Microscopy (ExMM)--is a highly promising alternative method for performing cost-effective, high-resolution imaging of biological samples. With further advancement of the technology, we believe that ExMM will find widespread applications for high-resolution imaging particularly in research and healthcare scenarios in undeveloped countries or remote places.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26975883 PMCID: PMC4792139 DOI: 10.1038/srep22691
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Concepts of mini-microscopy and expansion microscopy.
(A) Photograph showing the mini-microscope; scale bar: 5 mm. (B,C) Mini-microscope images of a hemocytometer at 8X and 20X, respectively; scale bars: 100 μm and 50 μm. (D,E) Mini-microscope images of NIH/3T3 fibroblasts at 8X and 20X, respectively; scale bars: 200 μm and 100 μm. (F) Principle of expansion microscopy (ExM).
Figure 2ExMM imaging of tubulin for HEK cells.
(A,B) Pre- and post- expansion images obtained with a mini-microscope; scale bar: 100 μm. (C,D) Magnified views of the selected regions in (A,B); scale bar: 40 μm. (E,F) Intensity profiles of dotted lines taken at three different locations in (C,D), respectively.
Figure 3Comparison between ExMM and ExM.
(A) Post-expansion image obtained with a mini-microscope. (B,C) Pre- and post-expansion images obtained with a benchtop microscope. Objective: 10X, NA = 0.25. (D–F) Magnified views of the selected regions in (A–C). (G–I) Intensity profiles of dotted lines taken at three different locations in (D–F), respectively. Scale bars: 100 μm for (A–C); 40 μm for (D–F).
Figure 4Comparison between ExMM and ExM of expanded mouse brain slice.
(A–D) Images obtained with a mini-microscope (A,C) and with a bench-top microscope (B,D) at 10X (NA = 0.25) (A,B) and 20X (NA = 0.4) (C,D) magnifications. (E,F) Magnified views of the selected regions in (C,D), respectively. (G–I) Rigid co-registration of ExMM and ExM images in (A–F). Blue: ExMM images; white: ExM images. (J–L) Calculated RMS errors of ExMM and ExM images using a non-rigid co-registration process. Scale bars: 200 μm for (A,B,G); 100 μm for (C,D,H); 20 μm for (E,F,I).
Figure 5Comparison between ExMM and ExM of E. coli.
(A,B) Pre-expansion images obtained with a benchtop microscope. (C,D) Post-expansion images obtained with a benchtop microscope. Objective: 20X, NA = 0.4. (E,F) Post-expansion images obtained with a mini-microscope, where bacteria were stained using a monoclonal antibody to lipopolysaccharide. (G,H) Post-expansion images obtained with a mini-microscope, where bacteria were stained using a polyclonal antibody to E. coli. Scale bars: 5 μm for (A,C,E,G); 2 μm for (B,D,F,H).