2009 APS March Meeting
Volume 54, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 16–20, 2009;
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Session H7: Cellular Imaging at the Nanometer Scale
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Room: 407
Sponsoring
Unit:
DBP
Chair: K.C. Huang, Stanford University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.MAR.H7.1
Abstract: H7.00001 : Irving Langmuir Prize Talk: Single-Molecule Fluorescence Imaging: Nanoscale Emitters with Photoinduced Switching Enable Superresolution.
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
W. E. Moerner
(Stanford University)
In the two decades since the first optical detection and
spectroscopy of a
single molecule in a solid (Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{62}, 2535
(1989)), much
has been learned about the ability of single molecules to probe
local
nanoenvironments and individual behavior in biological and
nonbiological
materials in the absence of ensemble averaging that can obscure
heterogeneity. The early years concentrated on high-resolution
spectroscopy
in solids, which provided observations of lifetime-limited
spectra, optical
saturation, spectral diffusion, optical switching, vibrational
spectra, and
magnetic resonance of a single molecular spin. In the mid-1990's,
much of
the field moved to room temperature, where a wide variety of
biophysical
effects were subsequently explored, but it is worth noting that
several
features from the low-temperature studies have analogs at high
temperature.
For example, in our first studies of yellow-emitting variants of
green
fluorescent protein (EYFP) in the water-filled pores of a gel
(Nature
\textbf{388}, 355 (1997)), optically induced switching of the
emission was
observed, a room-temperature analog of the earlier
low-temperature behavior.
Because each single fluorophore acts a light source roughly 1 nm
in size,
microscopic imaging of individual fluorophores leads naturally to
superlocalization, or determination of the position of the
molecule with
precision beyond the optical diffraction limit, simply by
digitization of
the point-spread function from the single emitter. Recent work
has allowed
measurement of the shape of single filaments in a living cell
simply by
allowing a single molecule to move through the filament (PNAS
\textbf{103},
10929 (2006)). The additional use of photoinduced control of
single-molecule
emission allows imaging beyond the diffraction limit
(superresolution) by
several novel approaches proposed by different researchers. For
example,
using photoswitchable EYFP, a novel protein superstructure can
now be
directly imaged in a living bacterial cell at sub-40nm resolution
(Nat.
Meth. \textbf{5}, 947 (2008)). These important advances provide
the impetus
for the further development of both new imaging schemes with 3-D
capability
as well as invention of new photoswitchable single-molecule
emitters for use
in polymers and in biological systems (JACS \textbf{130}, 9204
(2008); J.
Phys. Chem. B \textbf{112}, 11878 (2008)).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.MAR.H7.1