Characterization of Reversibly Switchable Fluorescent Proteins in Optoacoustic Imaging
Author(s) -
Paul Vetschera,
Kanuj Mishra,
J. Werner,
Andriy Chmyrov,
Vasilis Ntziachristos,
André C. Stiel
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
analytical chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.117
H-Index - 332
eISSN - 1520-6882
pISSN - 0003-2700
DOI - 10.1021/acs.analchem.8b02599
Subject(s) - fluorescence , chemistry , microscopy , fluence , characterization (materials science) , resolution (logic) , fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy , optics , signal (programming language) , laser , physics , computer science , artificial intelligence , programming language
Reversibly switchable fluorescent proteins (rsFPs) have had a revolutionizing effect on life science imaging due to their contribution to sub-diffraction-resolution optical microscopy (nanoscopy). Initial studies showed that their use as labels could also be highly beneficial for emerging photo- or optoacoustic imaging. It could be shown that their use in optoacoustics (i) strongly improves the imaging contrast-to-noise ratio due to modulation and locked-in detection, (ii) facilitates fluence calibration, affording precise measurements of physiological parameters, and finally (iii) could boost spatial resolution following similar concepts as used for nanoscopy. However, rsFPs show different photophysical behavior in optoacoustics than in optical microscopy because optoacoustics requires pulsed illumination and depends on signal generation via nonradiative energy decay channels. This implies that rsFPs optimized for fluorescence imaging may not be ideal for optoacoustics. Here, we analyze the photophysical behavior of a broad range of rsFPs with optoacoustics and analyze how the experimental factors central to optoacoustic imaging influence the different types of rsFPs. Finally, we discuss how knowledge of the switching behavior can be exploited for various optoacoustic imaging approaches using sophisticated temporal unmixing schemes.
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