Abstract

Photobleaching is a major limitation of superresolution Stimulated Depletion Emission (STED) microscopy. Fast scanning has long been considered an effective means to reduce photobleaching in fluorescence microscopy, but a careful quantitative study of this issue is missing. In this paper, we show that the photobleaching rate in STED microscopy can be slowed down and the fluorescence yield be enhanced by scanning with high speed, enabled by using large field of view in a custom-built resonant-scanning STED microscope. The effect of scanning speed on photobleaching and fluorescence yield is more remarkable at higher levels of depletion laser irradiance, and virtually disappears in conventional confocal microscopy. With ≥6 GW∙cm−2 depletion irradiance, we were able to extend the fluorophore survival time of Atto 647N and Abberior STAR 635P by ~80% with 8-fold wider field of view. We confirm that STED Photobleaching is primarily caused by the depletion light acting upon the excited fluorophores. Experimental data agree with a theoretical model. Our results encourage further increasing the linear scanning speed for photobleaching reduction in STED microscopy.

Highlights

  • We show that the photobleaching rate in Stimulated Depletion Emission (STED) microscopy can be slowed down and the fluorescence yield be enhanced by scanning with high speed, enabled by using large field of view in a custombuilt resonant-scanning STED microscope

  • The main conclusion of this paper is that the linear scanning speed has a nontrivial impact on the photobleaching rate and fluorescence yield in resonant scanning STED microscopy

  • Since the frequency of the resonant scanner is fixed, the linear scanning speed can be readily controlled by changing the width of the scan field of view (FOV)

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Summary

Introduction

We conducted the same experiment for Sample #2 (see Supplementary Fig. S3) and obtained the same result: the scanning speed has little impact on photobleaching rate when depletion is not present.

Results
Conclusion
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