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Confocal light absorption and scattering spectroscopic microscopy monitors organelles in live cells with no exogenous labels

Authors :
Irving J. Bigio
Edward Vitkin
Benjamin P. Sachs
Irving Itzkan
Lev T. Perelman
Ionita Ghiran
Eugene B. Hanlon
Steven D. Freedman
Lauren M. Kimerer
Munir M. Zaman
Le Qiu
Hui Fang
Kee-Hak Lim
Charlotte Andersson
Saira Salahuddin
P.B. Cipolloni
Mark D. Modell
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
National Academy of Sciences, 2007.

Abstract

This article reports the development of an optical imaging technique, confocal light absorption and scattering spectroscopic (CLASS) microscopy, capable of noninvasively determining the dimensions and other physical properties of single subcellular organelles. CLASS microscopy combines the principles of light-scattering spectroscopy (LSS) with confocal microscopy. LSS is an optical technique that relates the spectroscopic properties of light elastically scattered by small particles to their size, refractive index, and shape. The multispectral nature of LSS enables it to measure internal cell structures much smaller than the diffraction limit without damaging the cell or requiring exogenous markers, which could affect cell function. Scanning the confocal volume across the sample creates an image. CLASS microscopy approaches the accuracy of electron microscopy but is nondestructive and does not require the contrast agents common to optical microscopy. It provides unique capabilities to study functions of viable cells, which are beyond the capabilities of other techniques.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb9c216322f45f1a2c714bddde88bcbd