
Sub‐10 nm Distance Measurements between Fluorophores using Photon‐Accumulation Enhanced Reconstruction
Author(s) -
Dong Biqin,
Song Ki-Hee,
Davis Janel L.,
Zhang Hao F.,
Sun Cheng
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced photonics research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2699-9293
DOI - 10.1002/adpr.202000038
Subject(s) - fluorophore , photon , förster resonance energy transfer , fluorescence , monte carlo method , physics , range (aeronautics) , energy (signal processing) , microscopy , optics , biological system , materials science , mathematics , statistics , biology , quantum mechanics , composite material
Single‐molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) precisely localizes individual fluorescent molecules within the wide field of view (FOV). However, the localization precision is fundamentally limited to around 20 nm due to the physical photon limit of individual stochastic single‐molecule emissions. Using spectroscopic SMLM (sSMLM) to resolve their distinct fluorescence emission spectra, individual fluorophore is specifically distinguished and identified, even the ones of the same type. Consequently, the reported photon‐accumulation enhanced reconstruction (PACER) method accumulates photons over repeated stochastic emissions from the same fluorophore to significantly improve the localization precision. This work shows the feasibility of PACER by resolving quantum dots that are 6.1 nm apart with 1.7 nm localization precision. Next, a Monte Carlo simulation is used to investigate the success probability of the PACER's classification process for distance measurements under different conditions. Finally, PACER is used to resolve and measure the lengths of DNA origami nanorulers with an inter‐molecular spacing as small as 6 nm. Notably, the demonstrated sub‐2 nm localization precision bridges the detection range between Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) and conventional SMLM. Fully exploiting the underlying imaging capability can potentially enable high‐throughput inter‐molecular distance measurements over a large FOV.