Circularly polarized luminescence laser scanning confocal microscopy to study live cell chiral molecular interactions
Authors/Creators
Description
The molecular machinery of life is founded on chiral building blocks, but no experimental technique is currently available to distinguish or monitor chiral systems in live cell bioimaging studies. Luminescent chiral molecules encode a unique optical fingerprint within emitted circularly polarized light (CPL) carrying information about the molecular environment, conformation, and binding state. Here, we present a CPL Laser Scanning Confocal Microscope (CPL-LSCM) capable of simultaneous chiroptical contrast based live-cell imaging of endogenous and engineered CPL-active cellular probes. Further, we demonstrate that CPL-active probes can be activated using two-photon excitation, with complete CPL spectrum recovery. The combination of these two milestone results empowers the multidisciplinary imaging community, allowing the study of chiral interactions on a sub-cellular level in a new (chiral) light.
Files
CPL laser scanning confocal microscopy (Nat. Commun. 2022).pdf
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Additional details
Funding
- UK Research and Innovation
- NanoDrill - A new versatile research tool - high spatial resolution light activated molecular nanomachines BB/S017615/1
- UK Research and Innovation
- Usurping the scalpel: non-invasive oxygen nanosensors to refine data acquisition BB/T009268/1
- European Commission
- HEL4CHIROLED - Helical systems for chiral organic light emitting diodes 859752