What Is Super-Resolution Microscopy?

Introduction

Light microscopes are used to observe and image objects that are too small for the human eye to see properly. However, there is also a limit to what these microscopes can see, as they are limited by the diffraction limit of light and can only observe/image samples that are larger than approximately 200 nm in size.

Human cells are typically 10 µm in diameter, meaning that microscopes can easily observe them but smaller components inside the cell (mitochondria, nucleus, etc.) and other organisms like bacteria and viruses can be over 100x smaller, and other samples like DNA and proteins can be smaller still. If researchers want to observe these small samples they can't do it with normal 'diffraction-limited' microscope techniques, and need techniques that can break through this diffraction limit: 'super-resolution' techniques.

image-1-1020x1024.png
Comparing diffraction-limited imaging (white) with super-resolution imaging
(orange) to show the increase in resolution past the diffraction-limit.
Image from Dr. Alexandre Fürstenberg Kinetix Customer Story.


The Diffraction Limit Of Light

The smallest point that can be seen with a diffraction-limited system is called an Airy disk, named after the mathematician George Biddell Airy. Because light travels as a wave, when it passes through the small microscope aperture the light spreads out into a diffraction pattern, spreading the light out over a wide area, as seen in Fig.1.

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Figure 1: Diffraction patterns of light. A) After light passes through a small
space, the diffraction pattern spreads out to a much wider area.B) Airy
disks, shown in 2D (top) and 3D (bottom, height shows light intensity). C)
If two Airy disks are close,they can merge and be seen as one. Top image
shows two disks that can be seen as separate, middle image shows
the Rayleigh limit before merging, bottom image shows two disks
that are too close to distinguish between.

The spreading light forms an Airy disk (Fig.1B) and illuminates everything across a large area, making it impossible to pick out smaller sub 200 nm sized structures. Statistics can be used to convert the Airy disks into smaller points: because an Airy disk is brighter at the center, a point is fitted to the brightest spot. This point is accurate up to 1 nm and can improve image quality (Fig.2).

However, the main issue is highlighted in Fig.1C: if two Airy disks get too close together they can merge into one, making it impossible to tell close objects apart. These merged disks are counted as one data point and information is lost, even with the statistical fitting. Microscope samples contain millions of molecules that can be various distances apart, if they are too close they will be observed as a single point instead of multiple points. Only with super-resolution techniques can these samples be properly imaged.

image-8.png
Figure 2: Localizing a single point from an Airy disk. A) A pixelated Airy disk, this is how the raw data
appears. B) By applying a statistical function, the pixels can be fit to the intensity of the light, indicating
the spot of most intense light. C) The data can be used to localize the central data point where the
fluorophore is located, potentially down to ~1 nm. D) A schematic of this occurring across multiple Airy
disks. Without super-resolution techniques, these disks are likely to merge and be counted as fewer
points than shown.


Super-Resolution Techniques

Super resolution techniques use a variety of methods to break the diffraction limit of light, and can be broken down into a few main categories.

Super-Resolution Localization

Localization techniques overcome the problem of overlapping fluorophores by using fluorescent molecules that switch on and off at random. By taking thousands of images enough data is captured where all the molecules would have been "on" at least once. Molecules close together in space, are unlikely to both be "on" at the same time in the same image frame and can therefore be separated by time. Techniques in this category include: photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) (seen in Fig.3A-B), stochastic optical resolution microscopy (STORM) (seen in Fig.3E-G), and DNA-based point accumulation for images in nanoscale topography (DNA-PAINT) (seen in Fig.3C-D).

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Figure 3: Images from different super-resolution localization techniques, compared to standard
microscopy. A) Standard microscopy and B) PALM images of transmembrane proteins (image
from Betzig et al. 2006). C) Standard microscopy and D) DNA-PAINT images of mitochondria
(magenta) and microtubules (green) from within a cell (image from Jungmann et al. 2014).
E/F/G) Two-color STORM images of microtubules (green) and clathrin-coated pits from within a
mammalian cell at increasing magnifications, the area indicated by dashed box on the previous
image (image from Bates et al. 2007).

Structured Light

Structured light techniques use patterns of light instead of normal illumination. The basic technique in this category is structured illumination microscopy (SIM). When two patterns are overlaid it creates an interference pattern called a Moiré pattern, by imaging through these Moiré patterns super-resolution images can be achieved. A useful variation of SIM is instant SIM (iSIM) which is up to 10,000x faster than PALM/STORM and uses patterns of light that are scanned across the sample. Examples of iSIM images are shown in Fig.4. This technique is similar to spinning disk confocal microscopy, which can also achieve super-resolution imaging.

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Figure 4: Imaging with iSIM vs confocal microscopy. Images of live human cells showing peroxisomes
in green and mitochondria in purple. A-C) iSIM images at different magnifications, D-F) Spinning
disk confocal images at different magnifications, G-I) Line scanning confocal images at different magnifications.
A good comparison of standard vs super-resolution images is seen from B (super-resolution) vs E+H (standard).

Super Resolution Spinning Disk

Spinning disk confocal microscopy is a versatile and widely used imaging technique in biology due to its ability to perform fast, 3D imaging of live cells. Recently, techniques have been created that combine super-resolution imaging with the simplicity and optical sectioning capability of spinning disk confocal, resulting in a spinning disk system capable of a twofold resolution improvement over the diffraction limit. Combining super-resolution with spinning disk confocal microscopy overcomes many issues of both techniques to create a powerful new technique for live cell imaging that promises high sensitivity, resolution, and speed.

Through a process of optical photon reassignment, this technique increases the maximum resolution of a spinning disk confocal by up to √2x (1.4x), up to 2x after deconvolution. By rotating the disks at 4000 rpm, super-resolution images can be captured live at up to 200 fps using most fluorescent dyes.

These super-resolution systems have a maximum resolution limit of ~120 nm (as opposed to the diffraction-limited SDCM maximum of ~250 nm). Due to this high resolution, it is necessary to pair these systems with a camera that is also capable of sampling at super-resolution levels. It is vital to use an appropriate scientific camera for super-resolution SDCM with the pixels optimized for Nyquist sampling at higher magnifications, as this kind of system uses very high magnifications, often over 200x by combining objectives.

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Figure 5: Comparison of images of microtubules. A) Standard widefield, B) widefield with deconvolution,
C) spinning disk optical photon reassignment (SD-OPR) and D) SD-OPR with deconvolution. E-H
represents the yellow square in the corresponding images A-D. Deconvolved images were
obtained by applying 3D deconvolution using Huygens. Scale bars represent 10 µm. Adapted from
Azuma and Kei (2015).


Summary

By breaking through the diffraction limit of light, super-resolution microscopy can image small samples with high resolution, pushing the boundaries of scientific research.

In order to read more about each class of super-resolution technique, be sure to check the individual app notes on the Learn page:

  1. Localization (PALM, STORM, DNA-PAINT)
  2. Structured Light (SIM and iSIM)
  3. Super-resolution spinning disk

Further Reading

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