4.4 Article

Photobleaching of YOYO-1 in super-resolution single DNA fluorescence imaging

Journal

BEILSTEIN JOURNAL OF NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages 2296-2306

Publisher

BEILSTEIN-INSTITUT
DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.8.229

Keywords

diffusion; PAINT; single-molecule photophysics; super-resolution imaging

Funding

  1. Ohio University startup fund, Nanoscale and Quantum Phenomena Institute (NQPI)
  2. Condensed Matter and Surface Sciences (CMSS)

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Super-resolution imaging of single DNA molecules via point accumulation for imaging in nanoscale topography (PAINT) has great potential to visualize fine DNA structures with nanometer resolution. In a typical PAINT video acquisition, dye molecules (YOYO-1) in solution sparsely bind to the target surfaces (DNA) whose locations can be mathematically determined by fitting their fluorescent point spread function. Many YOYO-1 molecules intercalate into DNA and remain there during imaging, and most of them have to be temporarily or permanently fluorescently bleached, often stochastically, to allow for the visualization of a few fluorescent events per DNA per frame of the video. Thus, controlling the fluorescence on-off rate is important in PAINT. In this paper, we study the photobleaching of YOYO-1 and its correlation with the quality of the PAINT images. At a low excitation laser power density, the photobleaching of YOYO-1 is too slow and a minimum required power density was identified, which can be theoretically predicted with the proposed method in this report.

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