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Macro-SICM: A Scanning Ion Conductance Microscope for Large-Range Imaging.

Nicolas SchierbaumMartin HackOliver BetzTilman E Schäffer
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2018)
The scanning ion conductance microscope (SICM) is a versatile, high-resolution imaging technique that uses an electrolyte-filled nanopipet as a probe. Its noncontact imaging principle makes the SICM uniquely suited for the investigation of soft and delicate surface structures in a liquid environment. The SICM has found an ever-increasing number of applications in chemistry, physics, and biology. However, a drawback of conventional SICMs is their relatively small scan range (typically 100 μm × 100 μm in the lateral and 10 μm in the vertical direction). We have developed a Macro-SICM with an exceedingly large scan range of 25 mm × 25 mm in the lateral and 0.25 mm in the vertical direction. We demonstrate the high versatility of the Macro-SICM by imaging at different length scales: from centimeters (fingerprint, coin) to millimeters (bovine tongue tissue, insect wing) to micrometers (cellular extensions). We applied the Macro-SICM to the study of collective cell migration in epithelial wound healing.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • cell migration
  • mass spectrometry
  • wound healing
  • magnetic resonance
  • zika virus
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • single molecule
  • living cells
  • aedes aegypti