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0 Q&A 1133 Views Jul 20, 2025

In vitro systems based on Xenopus egg extracts have elucidated many aspects of spindle assembly. Still, numerous unknowns remain, particularly concerning the variation in spindle morphologies. The X. laevis and X. tropicalis egg extract systems, which recapitulate diverse spindle sizes and architectures, serve as ideal tools to investigate the regulation of spindle morphometrics. However, fully understanding spindle architectural differences is hindered by the spindle's size and high microtubule density. Indeed, classical fluorescence microscopy lacks the resolution to detail the organization of spindle microtubules, and although electron tomography can distinguish individual microtubules, segmenting thousands of microtubules and tracking them across dozens of sections remains an unachieved challenge. Therefore, we set out to apply expansion microscopy to the study of Xenopus egg extract spindles. During this process, we realized that optimizing spindle fixation as well was crucial to preserve microtubule integrity. Here, we present an optimized fixation and expansion microscopy protocol that enables the study of spindle architecture in egg extracts of both X. laevis and X. tropicalis. Our method retains the fluorescence of rhodamine tubulins added to the extracts and allows for both pre- and post-expansion immunofluorescence analysis.

0 Q&A 2074 Views Apr 20, 2025

Expansion microscopy (ExM) is an imaging technique that enables super-resolution imaging of biological specimens using conventional confocal microscopy. This process entails the isotropic physical expansion of a (biomolecular) sample that has been cross-linked to a swellable polymer. The grafting of biomolecules (and the subsequent fluorescent readout) is accomplished by introducing an acryloyl group to the amine groups of lysine residues within the proteins, enabling subsequent imaging. However, visualizing actin filaments with high spatial resolution using ExM remains challenging. Herein, we report the construction of a phalloidin conjugate containing actin stains and their application in ExM. This protocol highlights the efficacy of trifunctional linker (TRITON/Actin-ExM) for F-actin imaging, demonstrating that TRITON-labeled actin allows for efficient anchoring and signal retention, enabling robust visualization of actin filaments in expansion microscopy.

0 Q&A 3502 Views Mar 20, 2025

Super-resolution imaging of RNA–protein (RNP) condensates has shown that most are composed of different immiscible phases reflected by a heterogenous distribution of their main components. Linking RNA–protein condensate’s inner organization with their different functions in mRNA regulation remains a challenge, particularly in multicellular organisms. Drosophila germ granules are a model of RNA–protein condensates known for their role in mRNA storage and localized protein production in the early embryo. Present at the posterior pole of the embryo within a specialized cytoplasm called germplasm, they are composed of maternal mRNAs as well as four main proteins that play a key role in germ granule formation, maintenance, and function. Germ granules are necessary and sufficient to drive germ cell formation through translational regulation of maternal mRNAs such as nanos. Due to their localization at the posterior tip of the ovoid embryo and small size, the classical imaging setup does not provide enough resolution to reach their inner organization. Here, we present a specific mounting design that reduces the distance between the germ granule and the objectives. This method provides optimal resolution for the imaging of germ granules by super-resolution microscopy, allowing us to demonstrate their biphasic organization characterized by the enrichment of the four main proteins in the outermost part of the granule. Furthermore, combined with the direct visualization of nanos mRNA translation using the Suntag approach, this method enables the localization of translation events within the germ granule’s inner organization and thus reveals the spatial organization of its functions. This approach reveals how germ granules serve simultaneously as mRNA storage hubs and sites of translation activation during development. This work also highlights the importance of considering condensates’ inner organization when investigating their functions.

0 Q&A 1572 Views Jan 5, 2025

Mitochondrial cristae, formed by folding the mitochondrial inner membrane (IM), are essential for cellular energy supply. However, the observation of the IM is challenging due to the limitations in spatiotemporal resolution offered by conventional microscopy and the absence of suitable in vitro probes specifically targeting the IM. Here, we describe a detailed imaging protocol for the mitochondrial inner membrane using the Si-rhodamine dye HBmito Crimson, which has excellent photophysical properties, to label live cells for imaging via stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy. This allows for STED imaging over more than 500 frames (approximately one hour), with a spatial resolution of 40 nm, enabling the observation of cristae dynamics during various mitochondrial processes. The protocol includes detailed steps for cell staining, image acquisition, image processing, and resolution analysis. Utilizing the superior resolution of STED microscopy, the structure and complex dynamic changes of cristae can be visualized.

0 Q&A 2506 Views Sep 20, 2024

Expansion microscopy (ExM) has significantly reformed the field of super-resolution imaging, emerging as a powerful tool for visualizing complex cellular structures with nanoscale precision. Despite its capabilities, the epitope accessibility, labeling density, and precision of individual molecule detection pose challenges. We recently developed an iterative indirect immunofluorescence (IT-IF) method to improve the epitope labeling density, improving the signal and total intensity. In our protocol, we iteratively apply immunostaining steps before the expansion and exploit signal processing through noise estimation, denoising, and deblurring (NEDD) to aid in quantitative image analyses. Herein, we describe the steps of the iterative staining procedure and provide instructions on how to perform NEDD-based signal processing. Overall, IT-IF in ExM–laser scanning confocal microscopy (LSCM) represents a significant advancement in the field of cellular imaging, offering researchers a versatile tool for unraveling the structural complexity of biological systems at the molecular level with an increased signal-to-noise ratio and fluorescence intensity.

0 Q&A 2050 Views Aug 20, 2024

Calcium channels at synaptic boutons are critical for synaptic function, but their number and distribution are poorly understood. This gap in knowledge is primarily due to the resolution limits of fluorescence microscopy. In the last decade, the diffraction limit of light was surpassed, and fluorescent molecules can now be localized with nanometer precision. Concurrently, new gene editing strategies allowed direct tagging of the endogenous calcium channel genes—expressed in the correct cells and at physiological levels. Further, the repurposing of self-labeling enzymes to attach fluorescent dyes to proteins improved photon yields enabling efficient localization of single molecules. Here, we describe tagging strategies, localization microscopy, and data analysis for calcium channel localization. In this case, we are imaging calcium channels fused with SNAP or HALO tags in live anesthetized C. elegans nematodes, but the analysis is relevant for any super-resolution preparations. We describe how to process images into localizations and protein clusters into confined nanodomains. Finally, we discuss strategies for estimating the number of calcium channels present at synaptic boutons.

0 Q&A 2466 Views Oct 20, 2023

A fundamental understanding of gene regulation requires a quantitative characterization of the spatial organization and dynamics of chromatin. The advent of fluorescence super-resolution microscopy techniques such as photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) presented a breakthrough to visualize structural features with a resolution of ~20 nm in fixed cells. However, until recently the long acquisition time of super-resolution images prevented high-resolution measurements in living cells due to spreading of localizations caused by chromatin motion. Here, we present a step-by step protocol for our recently developed approach for correlatively imaging telomeres with conventional fluorescence and PALM, in order to obtain time-averaged super-resolution images and dynamic parameters in living cells. First, individual single molecule localizations are assigned to a locus as it moves, allowing to discriminate between bound and unbound dCas9 molecules, whose mobilities overlap. By subtracting the telomere trajectory from the localization of bound molecules, the motion blurring is then corrected, and high-resolution structural characterizations can be made. These structural parameters can also be related to local chromatin motion or larger scale domain movement. This protocol therefore improves the ability to analyze the mobility and time-averaged nanoscopic structure of locus-specific chromatin with single-molecule sensitivity.

0 Q&A 5144 Views Jun 20, 2023

Expansion microscopy (ExM) is a powerful technique to overcome the diffraction limit of light microscopy that can be applied in both tissues and cells. In ExM, samples are embedded in a swellable polymer gel to physically expand the sample and isotropically increase resolution in x, y, and z. By systematic exploration of the ExM recipe space, we developed a novel ExM method termed Ten-fold Robust Expansion Microscopy (TREx) that, as the original ExM method, requires no specialized equipment or procedures. TREx enables ten-fold expansion of both thick mouse brain tissue sections and cultured human cells, can be handled easily, and enables high-resolution subcellular imaging with a single expansion step. Furthermore, TREx can provide ultrastructural context to subcellular protein localization by combining antibody-stained samples with off-the-shelf small molecule stains for both total protein and membranes.

0 Q&A 1185 Views Apr 20, 2023

The mammalian Golgi complex consists of laterally connected Golgi stacks, each comprising close-packed and flattened membrane sacks called cisternae. However, the convoluted spatial organization of Golgi stacks and limited resolution of light microscopy prevent us from resolving the cisternal organization of the Golgi. Here, we describe our recently developed side-averaging approach coupled with Airyscan microscopy to visualize the cisternal organization of nocodazole-induced Golgi ministacks. First, the nocodazole treatment greatly simplifies the organization of Golgi stacks by spatially separating the crowded and amorphous Golgi complex into individual disk-shaped ministacks. The treatment also makes it possible to identify en face and side-views of Golgi ministacks. Next, after manually selecting the side-view Golgi ministack images, they are transformed and aligned. Finally, the resulting images are averaged to enhance the common structural features and suppress the morphological variations among individual Golgi ministacks. This protocol describes how to image and analyze the intra-Golgi localization of giantin, GalT-mCherry, GM130, and GFP-OSBP in HeLa cells by side-averaging.


Graphical overview


0 Q&A 3853 Views Mar 20, 2022

The centrosome is the main microtubule-organizing center of animal cells, and is composed of two barrel-shaped microtubule-based centrioles embedded in protein dense pericentriolar material. Compositional and architectural re-organization of the centrosome drives its duplication, and enables its microtubule-organizing activity and capability to form the primary cilium, which extends from the mature (mother) centriole, as the cell exits the cell cycle. Centrosomes and primary cilia are essential to human health, signified by the causal role of centrosome- and cilia-aberrations in numerous congenic disorders, as well as in the etiology and progression of cancer. The list of disease-associated centrosomal proteins and their proximitomes is steadily expanding, emphasizing the need for high resolution mapping of such proteins to specific substructures of the organelle. Here, we provide a detailed 3D-structured illumination microscopy (3D-SIM) protocol for comparative localization analysis of fluorescently labeled proteins at the centrosome in fixed human cell lines, at approximately 120 nm lateral and 300 nm axial resolution. The procedure was optimized to work with primary antibodies previously known to depend on more disruptive fixation reagents, yet largely preserves centriole and centrosome architecture, as shown by transposing acquired images of landmark proteins on previously published transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images of centrosomes. Even more advantageously, it is compatible with fluorescent protein tags. Finally, we introduce an internal reference to ensure correct 3D channel alignment. This protocol hence enables flexible, swift, and information-rich localization and interdependence analyses of centrosomal proteins, as well as their disorder-associated mutations.




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