Published August 4, 2023 | Version Second version
Journal article Open

Projective oblique plane structured illumination microscopy

  • 1. UT Southwestern Medical Center
  • 2. Arizona State University

Description

Structured illumination microscopy (SIM) can double the spatial resolution of a fluorescence microscope and video rate live cell imaging in a two-dimensional format has been demonstrated. However, rapid implementations of 2D SIM typically only cover a narrow slice of the sample immediately at the coverslip, with most of the cellular volume out of reach.  Here we implement oblique plane structured illumination microscopy (OPSIM) in a projection format to rapidly image an entire cell in a 2D SIM framework. As no mechanical scanning of the sample or objective is involved, this technique has the potential to allow rapid projection imaging with doubled resolution. We characterize the spatial resolution with fluorescent nanospheres, compare projection and 3D imaging using OPSIM and image mitochondria and ER dynamics across an entire cell at up to 2.7 Hz. To our knowledge, this represents the fastest whole cell SIM imaging to date.

Notes

Data for Figures 2-4 and Extended Figure 1 are given as TIFF files. The supplementary movies are based of the data in Figure 4. Raw pixel size is 114nm, after reconstruction it is resampled to 57nm. In addition, an example dataset for postprocessing is given.

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