4.0 Article

Photobleaching reduction in modulated super-resolution microscopy

Journal

MICROSCOPY
Volume 70, Issue 3, Pages 278-288

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jmicro/dfaa062

Keywords

fluorescence nanoscopy; STED microscopy; super-resolution; imaging; laser; photobleaching

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [NSF MRI 1126279]

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The breakthroughs in far-field imaging techniques have led to the development of STED microscopy using a synchronous detection approach to reduce photobleaching effects. This approach allows for super-resolution imaging at lower power levels, which is particularly relevant for biological samples.
Important breakthroughs in far-field imaging techniques have been made since the first demonstrations of stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy. To date, the most straightforward and widespread deployment of STED microscopy has used continuous wave (CW) laser beams for both the excitation and depletion of fluorescence emission. A major drawback of the CW STED imaging technique has been photobleaching effects due to the high optical power needed in the depletion beam to reach sub-diffraction resolution. To overcome this hurdle, we have applied a synchronous detection approach based on modulating the excitation laser beam, while keeping the depletion beam at CW operation, and frequency filtering the collected signal with a lock-in amplifier to record solely the super-resolved fluorescence emission. We demonstrate here that such approach allows an important reduction in the optical power of both laser beams that leads to measurable decreases in photobleaching effects in STED microscopy. We report super-resolution images with relatively low powers for both the excitation and depletion beams. In addition, typical unwanted scattering effects and background signal generated from the depletion beam, which invariably arises from mismatches in refractive index in the material composing the sample, are largely reduced by using the modulated STED approach. The capability of acquiring super-resolution images with relatively low power is quite relevant for studying a variety of samples, but particularly important for biological species as exemplified in this work.

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