Regensburg 2025 – wissenschaftliches Programm
Bereiche | Tage | Auswahl | Suche | Aktualisierungen | Downloads | Hilfe
BP: Fachverband Biologische Physik
BP 33: Focus Session Chemical Imaging for the Elucidation of Molecular Structure II (joint session O/BP)
BP 33.1: Hauptvortrag
Freitag, 21. März 2025, 10:30–11:00, H24
Multidimensional Super-resolution Imaging: Wasting Light to Learn New Things — •Steven Lee — University of Cambridge
The talk will outline two single-molecule fluorescence approaches that can be used to determine orthogonal metrics about a single emitter.
The first half introduces "POLCAM," a simplified single-molecule orientation localization microscopy (SMOLM) method based on polarised detection using a polarisation camera. POLCAM's fast algorithm operates over 1000 times faster than the current state-of-the-art, allowing near-instant determination of molecular anisotropy. To aid adoption, open-source image analysis software and visualization tools were developed. POLCAM's potential was demonstrated in studying alpha-synuclein fibrils and the actin cytoskeleton of mammalian cells. (Nature Methods 2024). The second approach focuses on "Single-Molecule Light Field Microscopy" (SMLFM), encoding 3D positions into 2D images for volumetric super-resolution microscopy. SMLFM shows an order-of-magnitude speed improvement over other 3D PSFs, resolving overlapping emitters through parallax. Experimental results reveal high accuracy and sensitivity in point detection, enabling whole-cell imaging of single membrane proteins in live primary B cells and high-density volumetric imaging in dense cytosolic tubulin datasets. (Nature Comms 2024)
Keywords: single-molecule; super-resolution; fluorescence; polarization anisotropy