Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Counting single photoactivatable fluorescent molecules by photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM)

2012; National Academy of Sciences; Volume: 109; Issue: 43 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1073/pnas.1215175109

ISSN

1091-6490

Autores

Sang-Hyuk Lee, Jae Yen Shin, Antony Lee, Carlos Bustamante,

Tópico(s)

Advanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and Applications

Resumo

We present a single molecule method for counting proteins within a diffraction-limited area when using photoactivated localization microscopy. The intrinsic blinking of photoactivatable fluorescent proteins mEos2 and Dendra2 leads to an overcounting error, which constitutes a major obstacle for their use as molecular counting tags. Here, we introduce a kinetic model to describe blinking and show that Dendra2 photobleaches three times faster and blinks seven times less than mEos2, making Dendra2 a better photoactivated localization microscopy tag than mEos2 for molecular counting. The simultaneous activation of multiple molecules is another source of error, but it leads to molecular undercounting instead. We propose a photoactivation scheme that maximally separates the activation of different molecules, thus helping to overcome undercounting. We also present a method that quantifies the total counting error and minimizes it by balancing over- and undercounting. This unique method establishes that Dendra2 is better for counting purposes than mEos2, allowing us to count in vitro up to 200 molecules in a diffraction-limited spot with a bias smaller than 2% and an uncertainty less than 6% within 10 min. Finally, we demonstrate that this counting method can be applied to protein quantification in vivo by counting the bacterial flagellar motor protein FliM fused to Dendra2.

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