Single-Molecule Spectroscopy and Super-Resolution Mapping of Physicochemical Parameters in Living Cells
- PMID: 38360526
- DOI: 10.1146/annurev-physchem-070623-034225
Single-Molecule Spectroscopy and Super-Resolution Mapping of Physicochemical Parameters in Living Cells
Abstract
By superlocalizing the positions of millions of single molecules over many camera frames, a class of super-resolution fluorescence microscopy methods known as single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) has revolutionized how we understand subcellular structures over the past decade. In this review, we highlight emerging studies that transcend the outstanding structural (shape) information offered by SMLM to extract and map physicochemical parameters in living mammalian cells at single-molecule and super-resolution levels. By encoding/decoding high-dimensional information-such as emission and excitation spectra, motion, polarization, fluorescence lifetime, and beyond-for every molecule, and mass accumulating these measurements for millions of molecules, such multidimensional and multifunctional super-resolution approaches open new windows into intracellular architectures and dynamics, as well as their underlying biophysical rules, far beyond the diffraction limit.
Keywords: functional imaging; intracellular physicochemical parameters; multidimensional super-resolution microscopy; single-molecule spectroscopy; spatial mapping; spectral microscopy.
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