Scientific Reports (Apr 2023)

Heat denaturation enables multicolor X10-STED microscopy

  • Kim Ann Saal,
  • Ali H. Shaib,
  • Nikolaos Mougios,
  • Dagmar Crzan,
  • Felipe Opazo,
  • Silvio O. Rizzoli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-32524-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Expansion microscopy (ExM) improves imaging quality by physically enlarging the biological specimens. In principle, combining a large expansion factor with optical super-resolution should provide extremely high imaging precision. However, large expansion factors imply that the expanded specimens are dim and are therefore poorly suited for optical super-resolution. To solve this problem, we present a protocol that ensures the expansion of the samples up to 10-fold, in a single expansion step, through high-temperature homogenization (X10ht). The resulting gels exhibit a higher fluorescence intensity than gels homogenized using enzymatic digestion (based on proteinase K). This enables the sample analysis by multicolor stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy, for a final resolution of 6–8 nm in neuronal cell cultures or isolated vesicles. X10ht also enables the expansion of 100–200 µm thick brain samples, up to 6-fold. The better epitope preservation also enables the use of nanobodies as labeling probes and the implementation of post-expansion signal amplification. We conclude that X10ht is a promising tool for nanoscale resolution in biological samples.