Litcius/Paper detail

Expansion microscopy with ninefold swelling (NIFS) hydrogel permits cellular ultrastructure imaging on conventional microscope

Hongxia Li, Antony R. Warden, Jie He, Guangxia Shen, Xianting Ding

2022Science Advances28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Superresolution microscopy enables probing of cellular ultrastructures. However, its widespread applications are limited by the need for expensive machinery, specific hardware, and sophisticated data processing. Expansion microscopy (ExM) improves the resolution of conventional microscopy by physically expanding biological specimens before imaging and currently provides ~70-nm resolution, which still lags behind that of modern superresolution microscopy (~30 nm). Here, we demonstrate a ninefold swelling (NIFS) hydrogel, that can reduce ExM resolution to 31 nm when using regular traditional microscopy. We also design a detachable chip that integrates all the experimental operations to facilitate the maximal reproducibility of this high-resolution imaging technology. We demonstrate this technique on the superimaging of nuclear pore complex and clathrin-coated pits, whose structures can hardly be resolved by conventional microscopy. The method presented here offers a universal platform with superresolution imaging to unveil cellular ultrastructural details using standard conventional laboratory microscopes.

Topics & Concepts

MicroscopyMicroscopeResolution (logic)Optical microscopeSuper-resolution microscopyMaterials scienceUltrastructureNanotechnologyBiomedical engineeringOpticsComputer scienceScanning confocal electron microscopyScanning electron microscopeBiologyPhysicsArtificial intelligenceAnatomyComposite materialMedicineAdvanced Fluorescence Microscopy TechniquesAdvanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and ApplicationsNear-Field Optical Microscopy