APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session A7: Prize Session: Single Molecule Biophysics I: Recent Advancements in Technology and Applications
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Monday, March 21, 2011
Room: Ballroom C3
Sponsoring
Units:
DBP DPOLY DCMP
Chair: Yan Mei Wang, Washington University in St. Louis
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.A7.1
Abstract: A7.00001 : Single Fluorescent Molecules as Nano-Illuminators for Biological Structure and Function
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
W.E. Moerner
(Stanford University)
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. 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. For example, the shape of
single filaments
in a living cell can be extracted simply by allowing a single
molecule to
move through the filament (PNAS \textbf{103}, 10929 (2006)). The
addition of
photoinduced control of single-molecule emission allows imaging
beyond the
diffraction limit (super-resolution) and a new array of acronyms
(PALM,
STORM, F-PALM etc.) and advances have appeared. We have used the
native
blinking and switching of a common yellow-emitting variant of green
fluorescent protein (EYFP) reported more than a decade ago (Nature
\textbf{388}, 355 (1997)) to achieve sub-40 nm super-resolution
imaging of
several protein structures in the bacterium\textit{ Caulobacter
crescentus}: the quasi-helix of the
actin-like protein MreB (Nat. Meth. \textbf{5}, 947 (2008)), the
cellular
distribution of the DNA binding protein HU (submitted), and the
recently
discovered division spindle composed of ParA filaments (Nat. Cell
Biol.
\textbf{12}, 791 (2010)). Even with these advances, better
emitters would
provide more photons and improved resolution, and a new
photoactivatable
small-molecule emitter has recently been synthesized and targeted to
specific structures in living cells to provide super-resolution
images (JACS
\textbf{132}, 15099 (2010)). Finally, a new optical method for
extracting
three-dimensional position information based on a double-helix
point spread
function enables quantitative tracking of single mRNA particles
in living
yeast cells with 15 ms time resolution and 25-50 nm spatial
precision (PNAS
\textbf{107}, 17864 (2010)). These examples illustrate the power of
single-molecule optical imaging in extracting new structural and
functional
information in living cells.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.A7.1