Photoregulated Fluxional Fluorophores for Live-Cell Super-Resolution Microscopy with No Apparent Photobleaching

19 February 2019, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Photoswitchable molecules have found multiple applications in the physical and life sciences because their properties can be modulated with light. Fluxional molecules, which undergo rapid degenerate rearrangements in the electronic ground state, also exhibit switching behavior. The stochastic nature of fluxional switching, however, has hampered its application in the development of functional molecules and materials. Here we combine photoswitching and fluxionality to develop a fluorophore that enables very long (>30 min) time-lapse single-molecule localization microscopy in living cells with minimal phototoxicity and no apparent photobleaching. These long time-lapse experiments allowed us to track intracellular organelles with unprecedented spatiotemporal resolution, revealing new information of the three-dimensional compartmentalization of synaptic vesicle trafficking in live human neurons.

Keywords

photoswitchable molecules
super-resolved fluorescence microscopy
Live Cell Microscopy
Fluxional properties
synaptic vesicles

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