Abstract

Single molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) has been established as an important super-resolution technique for studying subcellular structures with a resolution down to a lateral scale of 10 nm. Usually samples are illuminated with a Gaussian shaped beam and consequently insufficient irradiance on the periphery of the illuminated region leads to artifacts in the reconstructed image which degrades image quality. We present a newly developed patterned illumination SMLM (piSMLM) to overcome the problem of uneven illumination by computer-generated holography. By utilizing a phase-only spatial light modulator (SLM) in combination with a modified Gerchberg-Saxton algorithm, a user-defined pattern with homogeneous and nearly speckle-free illumination is obtained. Our experimental results show that irradiance 1 to 5 kW/cm2 was achieved by using a laser with an output power of 200 mW in a region of 2000 µm2 to 500 µm2, respectively. Higher irradiance of up to 20 kW/cm2 can be reached by simply reducing the size of the region of interest (ROI). To demonstrate the application of the piSMLM, nuclear structures were imaged based on fluctuation binding-activated localization microscopy (fBALM). The super-resolution fBALM images revealed nuclear structures at a nanometer scale.

Highlights

  • We present a newly developed patterned illumination single molecule localization microscope to overcome the problem of noneven illumination and which offers the possibility to define arbitrarily shaped illumination patterns by computer-generated holography (CGH)

  • To demonstrate the capability of patterned illumination single molecule localization microscope (piSMLM), a cell nucleus as an arbitrary shape was selected for the patterned illumination between two daughter cells

  • The flattop illumination can be applied to high-throughput microscopy by generating e.g. a square shaped illumination area

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Summary

Introduction

We present a newly developed patterned illumination single molecule localization microscope (piSMLM) to overcome the problem of noneven illumination and which offers the possibility to define arbitrarily shaped illumination patterns by computer-generated holography (CGH). D-07743 Jena & 4Leibniz Institute of Photonic Technology, D-07745 Jena, Germany

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