Rhodamine-Derived Fluorescent Dye with Inherent Blinking Behavior for Super-Resolution Imaging.
Patrick J MacdonaldSusan GaydaRichard A HaackQiaoqiao RuanRichard J HimmelsbachSergey Y TetinPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2018)
Super-resolution microscopy enables imaging of structures smaller than the diffraction limit. Single-molecule localization microscopy methods, such as photoactivation localization microscopy and stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy, reconstruct images by plotting the centroids of fluorescent point sources from a series of frames in which only a few molecules are fluorescing at a time. These approaches require simpler instrumentation than methods that depend on structured illumination and thus are becoming widespread. The functionalized rhodamine derivative reported in this paper spontaneously converts between a bright and dark state due to pH-dependent cyclization. At pH 7, less than 0.5% of the dye molecules are fluorescent at any given time. Blinking occurs on time scales of seconds to minutes and can therefore be used for single-molecule localization microscopy without sample treatment or activation. The dye is bright and straightforward to use, and it is easy to synthesize and functionalize. Thus, it has potential to become a new and powerful addition to the toolset for super-resolution imaging.