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Related Concept Videos

Super-resolution Fluorescence Microscopy01:37

Super-resolution Fluorescence Microscopy

6.8K
Super-resolution fluorescence microscopy (SRFM) provides a better resolution than conventional fluorescence microscopy by reducing the point spread function (PSF). PSF is the light intensity distribution from a point that causes it to appear blurred. Due to PSF, each fluorescing point appears bigger than its actual size, and it is the PSF interference of nearby fluorophores that causes the blurred image. Various approaches to achieving higher resolution through SRFM have recently been...
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Confocal Fluorescence Microscopy01:16

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Confocal microscopy is an advanced microscopic technique. The prime advantage of the confocal microscope over other microscopy techniques is its ability to block the out-of-focus light from the illuminated samples using pinholes. It is widely used with fluorescence optics to obtain high-resolution, sharp contrast images. Unlike optical microscopes, confocal microscopes use a focused beam of light laser to scan the entire sample surface at different z-planes. These microscopes are, therefore,...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 21, 2025

Simultaneous Multicolor Imaging of Biological Structures with Fluorescence Photoactivation Localization Microscopy
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Advancing biosensing through super-resolution fluorescence microscopy.

Ga-Eun Go1, Doory Kim2

  • 1Department of Chemistry, Hanyang University, Seoul, 04763, Republic of Korea.

Biosensors & Bioelectronics
|March 20, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Super-resolution fluorescence microscopy (SRM) offers nanoscale resolution and single-molecule sensitivity for advanced biosensing. This review explores SRM applications in living cells, challenges, and future directions for practical biosensing.

Keywords:
BiosensingSingle-molecule sensitivitySuper-resolution fluorescence microscopy

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Area of Science:

  • Biophysics
  • Nanotechnology
  • Molecular Imaging

Background:

  • Conventional biosensing methods often require signal amplification.
  • Super-resolution fluorescence microscopy (SRM) provides nanoscale spatial resolution and single-molecule sensitivity.
  • SRM overcomes limitations of traditional biosensing, enabling direct visualization and quantification of biomolecular targets.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To review the applications of various SRM techniques in biosensing.
  • To highlight SRM's unique capabilities in providing spatial distribution and molecular sensitivity.
  • To discuss challenges and future perspectives for SRM-based biosensing.

Main Methods:

  • Review of super-resolution fluorescence microscopy techniques.
  • Analysis of probe design and imaging protocols for dynamic biosensing.
  • Discussion of SRM's utility in visualizing molecular processes in native cellular contexts.

Main Results:

  • SRM enables visualization and quantification of biomolecular targets without signal amplification.
  • Innovations in probes and imaging allow dynamic biosensing in living cells.
  • SRM provides crucial spatial distribution information and high molecular sensitivity.

Conclusions:

  • SRM offers significant advantages over conventional biosensing methods.
  • Further advancements are needed to overcome challenges for broader SRM-based biosensing applications.
  • Future directions focus on advancing SRM for practical, real-world biosensing applications.