Free Content Variable-angle total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (VA-TIRFM): realization and application of a compact illumination device

Authors: Stock, K.; Sailer, R.1; Strauss, W. S. L.1; Lyttek, M.2; Steiner, R.1; Schneckenburger, H.

Source: Journal of Microscopy, Volume 211, Number 1, July 2003 , pp. 19-29(11)

Publisher: Blackwell Publishing

Abstract:

Summary

A novel compact illumination device in variable-angle total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (VA-TIRFM) is described. This device replaces the standard condensor of an upright microscope. Light from different laser sources is delivered via a monomode fibre and focused onto identical parts of a sample under variable angles of total internal reflection. Thus, fluorophores in close proximity to a cell-substrate interface are excited by an evanescent wave with variable penetration depth, and localized with high (nanometre) axial resolution. In addition to quantitative measurements in solution, fluorescence markers of the cytoplasm and the plasma membrane, i.e. calcein and laurdan, were examined using cultivated endothelial cells. Distances between the glass substrate and the plasma membrane were determined using the mathematical algorithm of a four-layer model, as well as a Gaussian-shaped intensity profile of the illumination spot on the samples. Distances between 0 and 30 nm in focal contacts and between 100 and 300 nm in other parts of the cell were thus determined. In addition to measurements of cell-substrate topology, the illumination device appears appropriate for numerous applications in which high axial resolution is required, e.g. experiments on endocytosis or exocytosis, as well as measurements of ion concentrations proximal to the plasma membrane. The compact illumination device is also suitable for combining TIRFM with further innovative techniques, e.g. time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy, fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) or fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET).

Keywords: Calcein; cell-substrate topology; evanescent waves; fluorescence microscopy; laurdan; TIR illumination

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2818.2003.01200.x

Affiliations: 1: Institut für Lasertechnologien in der Medizin und Messtechnik an der Universität Ulm, Ulm, Germany 2: Fachhochschule Aalen, Institut für Angewandte Forschung, 73428 Aalen, Germany

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