DOI resolved by resea

Imaging Intracellular Fluorescent Proteins at Nanometer Resolution

We introduce a method for optically imaging intracellular proteins at nanometer spatial resolution. Numerous sparse subsets of photoactivatable fluorescent protein molecules were activated,…

Eric Betzig, George H. Patterson, Rachid Sougrat, O. Wolf Lindwasser, Scott G. Olenych, Juan S. Bonifacino, Michael W. Davidson, Jennifer Lippincott‐Schwartz
https://resea.org/10.1126/science.1127344

Abstract

We introduce a method for optically imaging intracellular proteins at nanometer spatial resolution. Numerous sparse subsets of photoactivatable fluorescent protein molecules were activated, localized (to approximately 2 to 25 nanometers), and then bleached. The aggregate position information from all subsets was then assembled into a superresolution image. We used this method--termed photoactivated localization microscopy--to image specific target proteins in thin sections of lysosomes and mitochondria; in fixed whole cells, we imaged vinculin at focal adhesions, actin within a lamellipodium, and the distribution of the retroviral protein Gag at the plasma membrane.