| Literature DB >> 28317888 |
Benjamin T Miles1, Alexander B Greenwood1, David Benito-Alifonso2, Hugh Tanner3,4, M Carmen Galan2, Paul Verkade5,4, Henkjan Gersen1,3.
Abstract
Fluorescently labelled nanoparticles are routinely used in Correlative Light Electron Microscopy (CLEM) to combine the capabilities of two separate microscope platforms: fluorescent light microscopy (LM) and electron microscopy (EM). The inherent assumption is that the fluorescent label observed under LM colocalises well with the electron dense nanoparticle observed in EM. Herein we show, by combining single molecule fluorescent imaging with optical detection of the scattering from single gold nanoparticles, that for a commercially produced sample of 10 nm gold nanoparticles tagged to Alexa-633 there is in fact no colocalisation between the fluorescent signatures of Alexa-633 and the scattering associated with the gold nanoparticle. This shows that the attached gold nanoparticle quenches the fluorescent signal by ~95%, or less likely that the complex has dissociated. In either scenario, the observed fluorescent signal in fact arises from a large population of untagged fluorophores; rendering these labels potentially ineffective and misleading to the field.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28317888 PMCID: PMC5357795 DOI: 10.1038/srep44666
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic diagram of interferometric cross-polarization microscope (ICPM) that combines the ability to detect scattering of single nanoparticles and single molecule fluorescence, further details in main text. (b) Overlayed false colour images of scattering and fluorescent signal (green and red respectively) produced by 10 nm fluorescent nanodiamond demonstrating the excellent overlap we achieve. The applied optical power for λ = 532 nm is 37.0 μW. Images are captured at a pixel (px) resolution of 36 nm/px × 39 nm/px over an imaging area of 4.5 μm × 2.9 μm at 124 pixels × 74 pixels collected at a scan rate of 0.24 s/line. (c,d) line scans 1 and 2 for one of the fluorescent nanodiamond particles in (b).
Figure 2Scattering and fluorescent signal produced by unpurified NP-A-633 are overlayed and presented in a false colour image (green and red respectively). Images are captured at a pixel resolution of 45 nm/px × 49 nm/px over an imaging area of 23.2 μm × 25.0 μm at 512 pixels × 512 pixels collected at a scan rate of 0.4 s/line.
Figure 3(a) Tapping-mode AFM image of purified 10 nm NP-A-633 after three cycles of centrifugation and re-dispersal at a pixel resolution of 9.76 nm/px × 9.76 nm/px. (b) A histogram of observed particles reveals a mean particle height of 9.80 nm with a FWHM (red dotted line) of 4.6 nm over a sample size of 1,258 particles.
Figure 4(a) False colour images of scattered (green) and fluorescent (red) signals are overlapped to facilitate observation of colocalisation events. (b) Results are also presented for the orthogonal illumination polarization to ensure all fluorescent molecules are excited. The dashed boxes identify blinking and bleaching events, evidence of single molecule detection. The applied optical power for λ = 532 nm is 14.9 μW and for λ = 632 nm the excitation power was measured as 7 μW. Images are captured at a pixel resolution of 45 nm/px × 49 nm/px over an imaging area of 23.2 μm × 25.0 μm at 512 pixels × 512 pixels collected at a scan rate of 0.4 s/line.
Figure 5(a) A histogram of the fluorescent signals independent of in-plane dipole orientation (K) not associated with scattering signatures (unbound). (b) The distribution in fluorescent background counts further than 0.17 μm away from any identified scattering or fluorescent signatures. (c) The mean fluorescence localised within 0.17 μm of each scattering signature.