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. 1999 Oct;77(4):2266-83.
doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(99)77066-9.

Cell membrane orientation visualized by polarized total internal reflection fluorescence

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Cell membrane orientation visualized by polarized total internal reflection fluorescence

S E Sund et al. Biophys J. 1999 Oct.

Abstract

In living cells, variations in membrane orientation occur both in easily imaged large-scale morphological features, and also in less visualizable submicroscopic regions of activity such as endocytosis, exocytosis, and cell surface ruffling. A fluorescence microscopic method is introduced here to visualize such regions. The method is based on fluorescence of an oriented membrane probe excited by a polarized evanescent field created by total internal reflection (TIR) illumination. The fluorescent carbocyanine dye diI-C(18)-(3) (diI) has previously been shown to embed in the lipid bilayer of cell membranes with its transition dipoles oriented nearly in the plane of the membrane. The membrane-embedded diI near the cell-substrate interface can be fluorescently excited by evanescent field light polarized either perpendicular or parallel to the plane of the substrate coverslip. The excitation efficiency from each polarization depends on the membrane orientation, and thus the ratio of the observed fluorescence excited by these two polarizations vividly shows regions of microscopic and submicroscopic curvature of the membrane, and also gives information regarding the fraction of unoriented diI in the membrane. Both a theoretical background and experimental verification of the technique is presented for samples of 1) oriented diI in model lipid bilayer membranes, erythrocytes, and macrophages; and 2) randomly oriented fluorophores in rhodamine-labeled serum albumin adsorbed to glass, in rhodamine dextran solution, and in rhodamine dextran-loaded macrophages. Sequential digital images of the polarized TIR fluorescence ratios show spatially-resolved time-course maps of membrane orientations on diI-labeled macrophages from which low visibility membrane structures can be identified and quantified. To sharpen and contrast-enhance the TIR images, we deconvoluted them with an experimentally measured point spread function. Image deconvolution is especially effective and fast in our application because fluorescence in TIR emanates from a single focal plane.

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