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Photo-uncaging Triggers on Self-Blinking to Control Single-Molecule Fluorescence Kinetics for Super-resolution Imaging.

Ying ZhengZhiwei YeXue ZhangYi Xiao
Published in: ACS nano (2024)
Super-resolution imaging, especially a single-molecule localization approach, has raised a fluorophore engineering revolution chasing sparse single-molecule dark-bright blinking transforms. Yet, it is a challenge to structurally devise fluorophores manipulating the single-molecule blinking kinetics. In this pursuit, we have developed a triggering strategy by innovatively integrating the photoactivatable nitroso-caging strategy into self-blinking sulfonamide to form a nitroso-caged sulfonamide rhodamine (NOSR). Our fluorophore demonstrated controllable self-blinking events upon phototriggered caging unit release. This exceptional blink kinetics improved the super-resolution imaging integrity on microtubules compared to self-blinking analogues. With the aid of paramount single-molecule fluorescence kinetics, we successfully reconstructed the ring structure of nuclear pores and the axial morphology of mitochondrial outer membranes. We foresee that our synthetic approach of photoactivation and self-blinking would facilitate rhodamine devising for super-resolution imaging.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • high resolution
  • atomic force microscopy
  • living cells
  • fluorescent probe
  • oxidative stress
  • fluorescence imaging
  • photodynamic therapy
  • aqueous solution
  • molecular docking