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Visualizing intracellular nanostructures of living cells by nanoendoscopy-AFM

Marcos Penedo, Keisuke Miyazawa, Naoko Okano, Hirotoshi Furusho, Takehiko Ichikawa, Mohammad Shahidul Alam, Kazuki Miyata, Chikashi Nakamura, Takeshi Fukuma

2021Science Advances59 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Atomic force microscopy (AFM) is the only technique that allows label-free imaging of nanoscale biomolecular dynamics, playing a crucial role in solving biological questions that cannot be addressed by other major bioimaging tools (fluorescence or electron microscopy). However, such imaging is possible only for systems either extracted from cells or reconstructed on solid substrates. Thus, nanodynamics inside living cells largely remain inaccessible with the current nanoimaging techniques. Here, we overcome this limitation by nanoendoscopy-AFM, where a needle-like nanoprobe is inserted into a living cell, presenting actin fiber three-dimensional (3D) maps, and 2D nanodynamics of the membrane inner scaffold, resulting in undetectable changes in cell viability. Unlike previous AFM methods, the nanoprobe directly accesses the target intracellular components, exploiting all the AFM capabilities, such as high-resolution imaging, nanomechanical mapping, and molecular recognition. These features should greatly expand the range of intracellular structures observable in living cells.

Topics & Concepts

Atomic force microscopyNanometreNanotechnologyNanostructureIntracellularNanoscopic scaleMaterials scienceCell biologyBiologyComposite materialForce Microscopy Techniques and ApplicationsAdvanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and ApplicationsMechanical and Optical Resonators
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