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Dive into the research topics where Andriy Chmyrov is active.

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Featured researches published by Andriy Chmyrov.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Iodide as a Fluorescence Quencher and Promoter-Mechanisms and Possible Implications

Andriy Chmyrov; Tor Sandén; Jerker Widengren

In this work, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) was used to investigate the effects of potassium iodide (KI) on the electronic-state population kinetics of a range of organic dyes in the visible wavelength range. Apart from a heavy atom effect promoting intersystem crossing to the triplet states in all dyes, KI was also found to enhance the triplet-state decay rate by a charge-coupled deactivation. This deactivation was only found for dyes with excitation maximum in the blue range, not for those with excitation maxima at wavelengths in the green range or longer. Consequently, under excitation conditions sufficient for triplet state formation, KI can promote the triplet state buildup of one dye and reduce it for another, red-shifted dye. This anticorrelated, spectrally separable response of two different dyes to the presence of one and the same agent may provide a useful readout for biomolecular interaction and microenvironmental monitoring studies. In contrast to the typical notion of KI as a fluorescence quencher, the FCS measurements also revealed that when added in micromolar concentrations KI can act as an antioxidant, promoting the recovery of photo-oxidized fluorophores. However, in millimolar concentrations KI also reduces intact, fluorescently viable fluorophores to a considerable extent. In aqueous solutions, for the dye Rhodamine Green, an optimal concentration of KI of approximately 5 mM can be defined at which the fluorescence signal is maximized. This concentration is not high enough to allow full triplet state quenching. Therefore, as a fluorescence enhancement agent, it is primarily the antioxidative properties of KI that play a role.


Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2008

Characterization of new fluorescent labels for ultra-high resolution microscopy

Andriy Chmyrov; Jutta Arden-Jacob; Alexander Zilles; Karl-Heinz Drexhage; Jerker Widengren

Photo-induced switching of dyes into dark, long-lived states, such as a triplet state, has recently gained increasing interest, as a means to achieve ultra-high optical resolution. Additionally, these long lived states are often highly environment-sensitive and their photodynamics can thus offer additional independent fluorescence-based information. However, although providing a useful mechanism for photo-induced switching, the triplet state often appears as a precursor state for photobleaching, which potentially can limit its usefulness. In this work, a set of rhodamine and pyronin dyes, modified by substitution of heavy atoms and nitrogen within or close to the central xanthene unit of the dyes, were investigated with respect to their triplet state dynamics and photostabilities, under conditions relevant for ultra-high resolution microscopy. Out of the dyes investigated, in particular the rhodamine and pyronin dyes with a sulfur atom replacing the central oxygen atom in the xanthene unit were found to meet the requirements for ultra-high resolution microscopy, combining a prominent triplet state yield with reasonable photostability.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

Förster Resonance Energy Transfer beyond 10 nm: Exploiting the Triplet State Kinetics of Organic Fluorophores

Heike Hevekerl; Thiemo Spielmann; Andriy Chmyrov; Jerker Widengren

Inter- or intramolecular distances of biomolecules can be studied by Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET). For most FRET methods, the observable range of distances is limited to 1-10 nm, and the labeling efficiency has to be controlled carefully to obtain accurate distance determinations, especially for intensity-based methods. In this study, we exploit the triplet state of the acceptor fluorophore as a FRET readout using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and transient state monitoring. The influence of donor fluorescence leaking into the acceptor channel is minimized by a novel suppression algorithm for spectral bleed-through, thereby tolerating a high excess (up to 100-fold) of donor-only labeled samples. The suppression algorithm and the high sensitivity of the triplet state to small changes in the fluorophore excitation rate make it possible to extend the observable range of FRET efficiencies by up to 50% in the presence of large donor-only populations. Given this increased range of FRET efficiencies, its compatibility with organic fluorophores, and the low requirements on the labeling efficiency and instrumentation, we foresee that this approach will be attractive for in vitro and in vivo FRET-based spectroscopy and imaging.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Quenching of Triplet State Fluorophores for Studying Diffusion-Mediated Reactions in Lipid Membranes

Johan Strömqvist; Andriy Chmyrov; Sofia Johansson; August Andersson; Lena Mäler; Jerker Widengren

An approach to study bimolecular interactions in model lipid bilayers and biological membranes is introduced, exploiting the influence of membrane-associated electron spin resonance labels on the triplet state kinetics of membrane-bound fluorophores. Singlet-triplet state transitions within the dye Lissamine Rhodamine B (LRB) were studied, when free in aqueous solutions, with LRB bound to a lipid in a liposome, and in the presence of different local concentrations of the electron spin resonance label TEMPO. By monitoring the triplet state kinetics via variations in the fluorescence signal, in this study using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, a strong fluorescence signal can be combined with the ability to monitor low-frequency molecular interactions, at timescales much longer than the fluorescence lifetimes. Both in solution and in membranes, the measured relative changes in the singlet-triplet transitions rates were found to well reflect the expected collisional frequencies between the LRB and TEMPO molecules. These collisional rates could also be monitored at local TEMPO concentrations where practically no quenching of the excited state of the fluorophores can be detected. The proposed strategy is broadly applicable, in terms of possible read-out means, types of molecular interactions that can be followed, and in what environments these interactions can be measured.


Science | 2016

Comment on "Extended-resolution structured illumination imaging of endocytic and cytoskeletal dynamics"

Steffen J. Sahl; Francisco Balzarotti; Jan Keller-Findeisen; Marcel Leutenegger; Volker Westphal; Alexander Egner; Flavie Lavoie-Cardinal; Andriy Chmyrov; Tim Grotjohann; Stefan Jakobs

Li et al. (Research Articles, 28 August 2015, aab3500) purport to present solutions to long-standing challenges in live-cell microscopy, reporting relatively fast acquisition times in conjunction with improved image resolution. We question the methods’ reliability to visualize specimen features at sub–100-nanometer scales, because the mandatory mathematical processing of the recorded data leads to artifacts that are either difficult or impossible to disentangle from real features. We are also concerned about the chosen approach of subjectively comparing images from different super-resolution methods, as opposed to using quantitative measures.


Analytical Chemistry | 2010

Recovery of Photoinduced Reversible Dark States Utilized for Molecular Diffusion Measurements

Andriy Chmyrov; Tor Sandén; Jerker Widengren

For a spatially restricted excitation volume, the effective modulation of the excitation in time is influenced by the passage times of the molecules through the excitation volume. By applying an additional time-modulated excitation, the buildup of photoinduced reversible dark states in fluorescent molecules can be made to vary significantly with their passage times through the excitation volume. The variations in the dark state populations are reflected by the time-averaged fluorescence intensity, which thus can be used to characterize the mobilities of the molecules. The concept was experimentally verified by measuring the fluorescence response of freely diffusing cyanine fluorophores (Cy5), undergoing trans-cis isomerization when subject to time-modulated excitation in a focused laser beam. From the fluorescence response, and by applying a simple photodynamic model, the transition times of the Cy5 molecules could be well reproduced when applying different laminar flow speeds through the detection volume. The presented approach puts no constraints on sample concentration, no requirements for high time resolution or sensitivity in the detection, nor requires a high fluorescence brightness of the characterized molecules. This can make the concept useful for a broad range of biomolecular mobility studies.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2010

Electrostatic Interactions of Fluorescent Molecules with Dielectric Interfaces Studied by Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy

Hans Blom; Kai Hassler; Andriy Chmyrov; Jerker Widengren

Electrostatic interactions between dielectric surfaces and different fluorophores used in ultrasensitive fluorescence microscopy are investigated using objective-based Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (TIR-FCS). The interfacial dynamics of cationic rhodamine 123 and rhodamine 6G, anionic/dianionic fluorescein, zwitterionic rhodamine 110 and neutral ATTO 488 are monitored at various ionic strengths at physiological pH. As analyzed by means of the amplitude and time-evolution of the autocorrelation function, the fluorescent molecules experience electrostatic attraction or repulsion at the glass surface depending on their charges. Influences of the electrostatic interactions are also monitored through the triplet-state population and triplet relaxation time, including the amount of detected fluorescence or the count-rate-per-molecule parameter. These TIR-FCS results provide an increased understanding of how fluorophores are influenced by the microenvironment of a glass surface, and show a promising approach for characterizing electrostatic interactions at interfaces.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Achromatic light patterning and improved image reconstruction for parallelized RESOLFT nanoscopy

Andriy Chmyrov; Marcel Leutenegger; Tim Grotjohann; Andreas Schönle; Jan Keller-Findeisen; Lars Kastrup; Stefan Jakobs; Gerald Donnert; Steffen J. Sahl; Stefan W. Hell

Fluorescence microscopy is rapidly turning into nanoscopy. Among the various nanoscopy methods, the STED/RESOLFT super-resolution family has recently been expanded to image even large fields of view within a few seconds. This advance relies on using light patterns featuring substantial arrays of intensity minima for discerning features by switching their fluorophores between ‘on’ and ‘off’ states of fluorescence. Here we show that splitting the light with a grating and recombining it in the focal plane of the objective lens renders arrays of minima with wavelength-independent periodicity. This colour-independent creation of periodic patterns facilitates coaligned on- and off-switching and readout with combinations chosen from a range of wavelengths. Applying up to three such periodic patterns on the switchable fluorescent proteins Dreiklang and rsCherryRev1.4, we demonstrate highly parallelized, multicolour RESOLFT nanoscopy in living cells for ~100 × 100 μm2 fields of view. Individual keratin filaments were rendered at a FWHM of ~60–80 nm, with effective resolution for the filaments of ~80–100 nm. We discuss the impact of novel image reconstruction algorithms featuring background elimination by spatial bandpass filtering, as well as strategies that incorporate complete image formation models.


Nature Methods | 2017

NeuBtracker—imaging neurobehavioral dynamics in freely behaving fish

Panagiotis Symvoulidis; Antonella Lauri; Anca Stefanoiu; Michele Cappetta; Steffen Schneider; Hongbo Jia; Anja Stelzl; Maximilian Koch; Carlos Cruz Perez; Ahne Myklatun; Sabine L. Renninger; Andriy Chmyrov; Tobias Lasser; Wolfgang Wurst; Vasilis Ntziachristos; Gil G. Westmeyer

A long-standing objective in neuroscience has been to image distributed neuronal activity in freely behaving animals. Here we introduce NeuBtracker, a tracking microscope for simultaneous imaging of neuronal activity and behavior of freely swimming fluorescent reporter fish. We showcase the value of NeuBtracker for screening neurostimulants with respect to their combined neuronal and behavioral effects and for determining spontaneous and stimulus-induced spatiotemporal patterns of neuronal activation during naturalistic behavior.


bioRxiv | 2018

Mid-infrared optoacoustic microscopy with label-free chemical contrast in living cells and tissues

Miguel A. Pleitez; Asrar Ali Khan; Josefine Reber; Andriy Chmyrov; Markus A. Seeger; Marcel Scheideler; Stephan Herzig; Vasilis Ntziachristos

We developed mid-infrared optoacoustic microscopy (MiROM), a bond-selective imaging modality that overcomes water/tissue opacity and depth limitations of mid-infrared sensing allowing uncompromised live-cell/thick-tissue mid-infrared microscopy with up to three orders of magnitudehigher sensitivity than other vibrational imaging modalities; such as Raman. We showcase the functional label-free biomolecular imaging capabilities of MiROM by monitoring the spatiotemporal dynamics of lipids and proteins during lipolysis in living adipocytes. Since MiROM, contrary to Ramanmodalities, is not only able to detect lipids and proteins, but also important metabolites such as glucose without the need of labels, here we discuss how MiROM yields novel functional label-free abilities for a broader range of analytical studies in living cells and tissues.

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Jerker Widengren

Royal Institute of Technology

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Stefan W. Hell

German Cancer Research Center

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Tor Sandén

Royal Institute of Technology

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August Andersson

Royal Institute of Technology

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