| Literature DB >> 33654221 |
Yeonho Chang1, Do-Hyeon Kim2, Kai Zhou1, Min Gyu Jeong3, Soyeon Park1, Yonghoon Kwon1, Triet Minh Hong1, Jungeun Noh1, Sung Ho Ryu4.
Abstract
Single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) has allowed the observation of various molecular structures in cells beyond the diffraction limit using organic dyes. In principle, the SMLM resolution depends on the precision of photoswitching fluorophore localization, which is inversely correlated with the square root of the number of photons released from the individual fluorophores. Thus, increasing the photon number by using highly bright fluorophores, such as quantum dots (QDs), can theoretically fundamentally overcome the current resolution limit of SMLM. However, the use of QDs in SMLM has been challenging because QDs have no photoswitching property, which is essential for SMLM, and they exhibit nonspecificity and multivalency, which complicate their use in fluorescence imaging. Here, we present a method to utilize QDs in SMLM to surpass the resolution limit of the current SMLM utilizing organic dyes. We confer monovalency, specificity, and photoswitchability on QDs by steric exclusion via passivation and ligand exchange with ptDNA, PEG, and casein as well as by DNA point accumulation for imaging in nanoscale topography (DNA-PAINT) via automatic thermally driven hybridization between target-bound docking and dye-bound complementary imager strands. QDs are made monovalent and photoswitchable to enable SMLM and show substantially better photophysical properties than Cy3, with higher fluorescence intensity and an improved resolution factor. QD-PAINT displays improved spatial resolution with a narrower full width at half maximum (FWHM) than DNA-PAINT with Cy3. In summary, QD-PAINT shows great promise as a next-generation SMLM method for overcoming the limited resolution of the current SMLM.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33654221 PMCID: PMC8080769 DOI: 10.1038/s12276-021-00572-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Mol Med ISSN: 1226-3613 Impact factor: 8.718
Fig. 1Formation of monovalent QDs for fluorescence imaging in cells.
a Experimental scheme of the formation of mQDs for imaging in cells. b Agarose gel electrophoresis of ptDNA-wrapped QDs yielding monovalent products. Representative TIRF images of COS7 cells expressing SNAP-EGFR with (c) and without (d) BG-docking strands attached obtained by using mQDs bearing complementary imager strands via 20-nucleotide hybridization. Scale bars, 5 μm.
Fig. 2QD-PAINT and DNA-PAINT with Cy3.
a Schematic of conducting DNA-PAINT with Cy3 (left) and QD-PAINT (right) on cells. b Plots of single-molecule measurements of the on-time of mQDs (left) and Cy3 (right). The error bars represent the accuracy of the fitting at the 95% confidence interval. c Statistical distribution of fluorescence intensity per fluorescence population density during SMLM imaging in QD-PAINT (red) and DNA-PAINT with Cy3 (black). The exposure times were 500 and 5000 ms for Cy3 and mQDs, respectively.
Fig. 3Improvement in spatial resolution with QD-PAINT over that in DNA-PAINT with Cy3.
Representative single-molecule images of EGFR obtained using QD-PAINT before (a left) and after (b left) reconstruction and using DNA-PAINT with Cy3 before (c left) and after (d left) reconstruction. Scale bars, 500 nm (a, c) and 100 nm (b, d). Cross-sectional histograms of the single molecules of EGFR for measuring the full width at half maximum (FWHM) over the dashed lines using QD-PAINT before (a right) and after (b right) reconstruction and using DNA-PAINT with Cy3 before (c right) and after (d right) reconstruction.