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Seeing the forest tree by tree: super-resolution light microscopy meets the neurosciences

Journal

NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 16, Issue 7, Pages 790-797

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nn.3403

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [TP A3/SFB 958, SI849 7-1]

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Light microscopy can be applied in vivo and can sample large tissue volumes, features crucial for the study of single neurons and neural circuits. However, light microscopy per se is diffraction-limited in resolution, and the substructure of core signaling compartments of neuronal circuits-axons, presynaptic active zones, postsynaptic densities and dendritic spines-can be only insufficiently characterized by standard light microscopy. Recently, several forms of super-resolution light microscopy breaking the diffraction-imposed resolution limit have started to allow highly resolved, dynamic imaging in the cell-biologically highly relevant 10-100 nanometer range ('mesoscale'). New, sometimes surprising answers concerning how protein mobility and protein architectures shape neuronal communication have already emerged. Here we start by briefly introducing super-resolution microscopy techniques, before we describe their use in the analysis of neuronal compartments. We conclude with long-term prospects for super-resolution light microscopy in the molecular and cellular neurosciences.

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