TY - JOUR
T1 - Plasmon-Enhanced Expansion Microscopy
AU - Rathi, Priya
AU - Gupta, Prashant
AU - Debnath, Avishek
AU - Baldi, Harsh
AU - Wang, Yixuan
AU - Gupta, Rohit
AU - Raman, Baranidharan
AU - Singamaneni, Srikanth
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2023/6/28
Y1 - 2023/6/28
N2 - Expansion microscopy (ExM) is a rapidly emerging super-resolution microscopy technique that involves isotropic expansion of biological samples to improve spatial resolution. However, fluorescence signal dilution due to volumetric expansion is a hindrance to the widespread application of ExM. Here, we introduce plasmon-enhanced expansion microscopy (p-ExM) by harnessing an ultrabright fluorescent nanoconstruct, called plasmonic-fluor (PF), as a nanolabel. The unique structure of PFs renders nearly 15000-fold brighter fluorescence signal intensity and higher fluorescence retention following the ExM protocol (nearly 76%) compared to their conventional counterparts (<16% for IR-650). Individual PFs can be easily imaged using conventional fluorescence microscopes, making them excellent “digital” labels for ExM. We demonstrate that p-ExM enables improved tracing and decrypting of neural networks labeled with PFs, as evidenced by improved quantification of morphological markers (nearly a 2.5-fold increase in number of neurite terminal points). Overall, p-ExM complements the existing ExM techniques for probing structure-function relationships of various biological systems.
AB - Expansion microscopy (ExM) is a rapidly emerging super-resolution microscopy technique that involves isotropic expansion of biological samples to improve spatial resolution. However, fluorescence signal dilution due to volumetric expansion is a hindrance to the widespread application of ExM. Here, we introduce plasmon-enhanced expansion microscopy (p-ExM) by harnessing an ultrabright fluorescent nanoconstruct, called plasmonic-fluor (PF), as a nanolabel. The unique structure of PFs renders nearly 15000-fold brighter fluorescence signal intensity and higher fluorescence retention following the ExM protocol (nearly 76%) compared to their conventional counterparts (<16% for IR-650). Individual PFs can be easily imaged using conventional fluorescence microscopes, making them excellent “digital” labels for ExM. We demonstrate that p-ExM enables improved tracing and decrypting of neural networks labeled with PFs, as evidenced by improved quantification of morphological markers (nearly a 2.5-fold increase in number of neurite terminal points). Overall, p-ExM complements the existing ExM techniques for probing structure-function relationships of various biological systems.
KW - expansion microscopy
KW - fluorescence microscopy
KW - nanoneuro interaction
KW - plasmon-enhanced fluorescence
KW - plasmonic-fluor
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85164210756
U2 - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c01256
DO - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c01256
M3 - Article
C2 - 37307329
AN - SCOPUS:85164210756
SN - 1530-6984
VL - 23
SP - 5654
EP - 5662
JO - Nano Letters
JF - Nano Letters
IS - 12
ER -