4.8 Article

Subnanometre single-molecule localization, registration and distance measurements

Journal

NATURE
Volume 466, Issue 7306, Pages 647-U11

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature09163

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health
  2. National Science Foundation
  3. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  4. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Remarkable progress in optical microscopy has been made in the measurement of nanometre distances. If diffraction blurs the image of a point object into an Airy disk with a root-mean-squared (r.m.s.) size of s = 0.44 lambda/2NA (similar to 90 nm for light with a wavelength of lambda = 600 nm and an objective lens with a numerical aperture of NA = 1.49), limiting the resolution of the far-field microscope in use to d = 2.4s approximate to 200 nm, additional knowledge about the specimen can be used to great advantage. For example, if the source is known to be two spatially resolved fluorescent molecules, the distance between them is given by the separation of the centres of the two fluorescence images(1). In high-resolution microwave and optical spectroscopy, there are numerous examples where the line centre is determined with a precision of less than 10(-6) of the linewidth. In contrast, in biological applications the brightest single fluorescent emitters can be detected with a signal-to-noise ratio of similar to 100, limiting the centroid localization precision to s(loc) >= 1% (>= 1 nm) of the r.m.s. size, s, of the microscope point spread function (PSF)(2). Moreover, the error in co-localizing two or more single emitters is notably worse, remaining greater than 5-10% (5-10 nm) of the PSF size(3-8). Here we report a distance resolution of s(reg) = 0.50 nm (1 sigma) and an absolute accuracy of s(distance) = 0.77 nm (1 sigma) in a measurement of the separation between differently coloured fluorescent molecules using conventional far-field fluorescence imaging in physiological buffer conditions. The statistical uncertainty in the mean for an ensemble of identical single-molecule samples is limited only by the total number of collected photons, to s(loc) approximate to 0.3 nm, which is similar to 3 x 10(-3) times the size of the optical PSF. Our method may also be used to improve the resolution of many subwavelength, far-field imaging methods such as those based on co-localization of molecules that are stochastically switched on in space(6-8). The improved resolution will allow the structure of large, multisubunit biological complexes in biologically relevant environments to be deciphered at the single-molecule level.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available