Abbelight’s SAFe 360 combines SAFe 180 illumination to a dual camera detection to achieve unprecedented 3D single-molecule and multi-color imaging.
Abbelight’s SAFe technology corrects artefacts from 3D single-molecule detection and its extremely large field of view transform any type of inverted microscope into a first-class high-throughput multimodal microscope.
The ultimate evolutive 3D nanoscope
- ALL SAFe180 features
- The highest isotropic 3D localization precision: 15 x 15 x 15 nm
- The largest field of view: 150 x 150 µm²
- Extended axial range with nanometer accuracy: Up to 5 µm
- Simultaneous multicolor imaging in EPI, TIRF up to 4 colors
- Spectral demixing: unique simultaneous multicolor imaging for dSTORM without abberation
Single Molecule Localization Microscopy Principle
Breaking the diffraction limit
A single molecule localization microscope relies on the ability to randomly activate only a subset of fluorescent molecules to distinguish them spatially.
By repeating the process in consecutive image acquisitions, accumulated raw data are processed to detect single molecules with a nanometric precision (down to 10 nm).
Data quantification and analysis are then performed to resolve either structures or dynamics at the nanoscale level. To reconstruct a nanoscopy image, each molecule is detected and localized by specialized algorithms.
To get information in 3D, the magnified astigmatism reveals the position of each molecule from the focus of the objective.
Single Molecule Localization Microscope capabilities
from structure to dynamics
Current SMLM approaches only differ in how the fluorophores activation-inactivation is induced. Among them, STORM, PALM and PAINT resolve spatial structures with nanometric precision, while SPT reveals temporal dynamic processes in living cells.
Structures …
dSTORM
direct STochastic Optical Reconstruction Microscopy
dSTORM exploits the photoswitchingproperties of some fluorophores. In certain conditions, fluorophores can be sent to an intermediary state (the “dark state”) from which they randomly cycle between ON and OFF states.
- Standard organic fluorescent dyes (cyanines, rhodamines, oxazines…)
- Specific imaging buffer containing a reducer, which induces the transition to a dark state, and an oxygen scavenging system to stabilize this state before returning to the ground state.
PALM
PhotoActivated Localization Microscopy
PALM uses specific fluorescent fusion proteins called “photoactivatable” or “photoconvertible”. The ON state of these proteins can be randomly activated with the proper laser excitation.
- Photo-activatable or convertible fluorescent proteins (mEos3,2, Dendra2, PA-mCherry, mMaple,…);
- No specific buffer, live-cell compatible
PAINT
Point Accumulation for Imaging in Nanoscale Topography
PAINT uses specific dyes that are ON only when they are transiently bound to their target. W ith the appropriate dye concentrations, it is possible to achieve a regime where only a few dyes are ON at the same time. DNA-PAINT uses short DNA single strands coupled to fluorophores. These probes are ON when they transiently hybridize to the complementary DNA strand coupled to an antibody targeting the structure of interest.
- Specific fluorophores that have the ability to emit fluorescence only upon binding to their biological target (ex: Nile Red, which fluoresces only when interacting with membranes)
- No specific buffer, live-cell compatible
Dynamics…
SPT
Single Particle Tracking
SPT in SMLM combines Single Particle Tracking with SMLM (PALM or STORM) to obtain spatially and temporally highly resolved diffusion maps of single molecules.SPT need a precise algorithm to found and draw tracks from each molecule in the cell, state of the art algorithm are implemented in Neo Softwares.
SAFe Light: see wider and faster!
ASTER technology
Single-molecule imaging experiments or TIRF microscopy are in many cases limited from the range of the field of view. This is due to the use of Gaussian excitation which does not allow a homogeneous field of illumination on the samples. To solve this issue, we innovated with a very versatile illumination scheme called “Adaptative Scanning for Tunable Excitation Rendering” (ASTER). This can create a uniform field of illumination up to from 25×25μm² to150x150μm².
- 150×150 µm² field of view with 300 mW laser power
- More intensity on the sample with lower laser power
- Illumination adaptable to the sample
- TIRF, HiLo or EPI illumination modes
- 16-times more quantitative data
- Homogeneous illumination, no interference patterns in the image
Multi-color imaging: One laser, 3 colors, no aberration!
Multicolor super-resolution microscopy is a powerful way to reveal macromolecular structure, to measure the direct distance between molecules, and to quantify molecular interactions at the nanoscale. It’s a challenge to perform this type of data acquisition without drifts, chromatic aberrations, and with the certainty of capturing data of comparable quality in all channels. The ideal solution requires equal conditions for all fluorophores regarding their photophysical responses, the same optical path, and the same uniform illumination to capture reliable multicolor images.
In Single Molecule Localization Microscopes, there is a different way to perform multicolor imaging. The first technique is sequential multicolor imaging which aims is to label two or more different structures with fluorophores that can be activated with different lasers wavelength without the overlay of fluorescence.
The second techniques, unique with abbelight’s SAFe systems, is the spectral demixing.
Spectral demixing
The principle is to split the emission fluorescence into two distinct detection channels thanks to a long pass dichroic beamsplitter. By using fluorophores emitting within the same wavelength range, their partially overlapping emission is then spectrally separated by the dichroic and imaged on the two detection scientific-grade cameras (the choice of the dichroic is linked to fluorophores and the SMLM strategy employed).
Each fluorophore can be retrieved on both images provided by the two cameras and the measured photon numbers on each camera will be related to the spectral separation of the fluorophore. Thus, a characteristic intensity ratio distribution R for each fluorophore can be determined. A calibration is required, by collecting the photon distribution on each camera from samples stained with single fluorophores.
abbelight’s website: https://www.abbelight.com/
For more microscopy products: https://www.axiomoptics.com/advanced-light-microscopy-p/