Imaging Intracellular Fluorescent Proteins at Nanometer Resolution
Abstract
We introduce a method for optically imaging intracellular proteins at nanometer spatial resolution. Numerous sparse subsets of photoactivatable fluorescent protein molecules were activated, localized (to ~2 to 25 nanometers), and then bleached. The aggregate position information from all subsets was then assembled into a superresolution image. We used this method-termed photoactivated localization microscopy-to image specific target proteins in thin sections of lysosomes and mitochondria; in fixed whole cells, we imaged vinculin at focal adhesions, actin within a lamellipodium, and the distribution of the retroviral protein Gag at the plasma membrane.
- Publication:
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Science
- Pub Date:
- September 2006
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2006Sci...313.1642B
- Keywords:
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- BIOCHEM