Application of STED Microscopy to Cell Biology Questions

2015 | book part

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​Application of STED Microscopy to Cell Biology Questions​
Revelo, N. H.  & Rizzoli, S. O. ​ (2015)
In: Advanced fluorescence microscopy: methods and protocols pp. 213​-230. ​New York: ​Humana Press. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-2080-8_12 

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Authors
Revelo, Natalia H. ; Rizzoli, S. O. 
Abstract
The increasing interest in "seeing" the molecular environment in biological systems has led to the recent quest for breaking the diffraction barrier in far-field fluorescence microscopy. The first nanoscopy method successfully applied to conventional biological probes was stimulated emission depletion microscopy (STED). It is based on a physical principle that instantly delivers diffraction-unlimited images, with no need for further computational processing: the excitation laser beam is overlaid with a doughnut-shaped depleting beam that switches off previously excited fluorophores, thereby resulting in what is effectively a smaller imaging volume. In this chapter we give an overview of several applications of STED microscopy to biological questions. We explain technical aspects of sample preparation and image acquisition that will help in obtaining good diffraction-unlimited pictures. We also present embedding techniques adapted for ultrathin sectioning, which allow optimal 3D resolutions in virtually all biological preparations.
Issue Date
2015
Publisher
Humana Press
Series
Methods in Molecular Biology 
ISBN
978-1-4939-2079-2
978-1-4939-4252-7
eISBN
978-1-4939-2080-8
Language
English

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