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Dive into the research topics where Christian Ringemann is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Ringemann.


Nature | 2009

Direct observation of the nanoscale dynamics of membrane lipids in a living cell

Christian Eggeling; Christian Ringemann; Rebecca Medda; Günter Schwarzmann; Konrad Sandhoff; Svetlana Polyakova; Vladimir N. Belov; Birka Hein; Claas von Middendorff; Andreas Schönle; Stefan W. Hell

Cholesterol-mediated lipid interactions are thought to have a functional role in many membrane-associated processes such as signalling events. Although several experiments indicate their existence, lipid nanodomains (‘rafts’) remain controversial owing to the lack of suitable detection techniques in living cells. The controversy is reflected in their putative size of 5–200 nm, spanning the range between the extent of a protein complex and the resolution limit of optical microscopy. Here we demonstrate the ability of stimulated emission depletion (STED) far-field fluorescence nanoscopy to detect single diffusing (lipid) molecules in nanosized areas in the plasma membrane of living cells. Tuning of the probed area to spot sizes ∼70-fold below the diffraction barrier reveals that unlike phosphoglycerolipids, sphingolipids and glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins are transiently (∼10–20 ms) trapped in cholesterol-mediated molecular complexes dwelling within <20-nm diameter areas. The non-invasive optical recording of molecular time traces and fluctuation data in tunable nanoscale domains is a powerful new approach to study the dynamics of biomolecules in living cells.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010

Red‐Emitting Rhodamine Dyes for Fluorescence Microscopy and Nanoscopy

Kirill Kolmakov; Vladimir N. Belov; Jakob Bierwagen; Christian Ringemann; Veronika Müller; Christian Eggeling; Stefan W. Hell

Fluorescent markers emitting in the red are extremely valuable in biological microscopy since they minimize cellular autofluorescence and increase flexibility in multicolor experiments. Novel rhodamine dyes excitable with 630 nm laser light and emitting at around 660 nm have been developed. The new rhodamines are very photostable and have high fluorescence quantum yields of up to 80 %, long excited state lifetimes of 3.4 ns, and comparatively low intersystem-crossing rates. They perform very well both in conventional and in subdiffraction-resolution microscopy such as STED (stimulated emission depletion) and GSDIM (ground-state depletion with individual molecular return), as well as in single-molecule-based experiments such as fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS). Syntheses of lipophilic and hydrophilic derivatives starting from the same chromophore-containing scaffold are described. Introduction of two sulfo groups provides high solubility in water and a considerable rise in fluorescence quantum yield. The attachment of amino or thiol reactive groups allows the dyes to be used as fluorescent markers in biology. Dyes deuterated at certain positions have narrow and symmetrical molecular mass distribution patterns, and are proposed as new tags in MS or LC-MS for identification and quantification of various substance classes (e.g., amines and thiols) in complex mixtures. High-resolution GSDIM images and live-cell STED-FCS experiments on labeled microtubules and lipids prove the versatility of the novel probes for modern fluorescence microscopy and nanoscopy.


Optics Express | 2012

Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy with a total internal reflection fluorescence STED microscope (TIRF-STED-FCS).

Marcel Leutenegger; Christian Ringemann; Theo Lasser; Stefan W. Hell; Christian Eggeling

We characterize a novel fluorescence microscope which combines the high spatial discrimination of a total internal reflection epi-fluorescence (epi-TIRF) microscope with that of stimulated emission depletion (STED) nanoscopy. This combination of high axial confinement and dynamic-active lateral spatial discrimination of the detected fluorescence emission promises imaging and spectroscopy of the structure and function of cell membranes at the macro-molecular scale. Following a full theoretical description of the sampling volume and the recording of images of fluorescent beads, we exemplify the performance and limitations of the TIRF-STED nanoscope with particular attention to the polarization state of the laser excitation light. We demonstrate fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) with the TIRF-STED nanoscope by observing the diffusion of dye molecules in aqueous solutions and of fluorescent lipid analogs in supported lipid bilayers in the presence of background signal. The nanoscope reduced the out-of-focus background signal. A lateral resolution down to 40-50 nm was attained which was ultimately limited by the low lateral signal-to-background ratio inherent to the confocal epi-TIRF scheme. Together with the estimated axial confinement of about 55 nm, our TIRF-STED nanoscope achieved an almost isotropic and less than 1 attoliter small all-optically induced measurement volume.


ChemPhysChem | 2008

Enhancing Fluorescence Brightness: Effect of Reverse Intersystem Crossing Studied by Fluorescence Fluctuation Spectroscopy

Christian Ringemann; Andreas Schönle; Arnold Giske; Claas von Middendorff; Stefan W. Hell; Christian Eggeling

Experiments based on fluorescence detection are limited by the population of the fluorescence markers long-lived dark triplet state, leading to pronounced photobleaching reactions and blinking which reduces the average fluorescence signal obtained per time interval. By irradiation with a second, red-shifted laser line, we initiate reverse intersystem crossing (ReISC) which enhances the fluorescence signal of common fluorophores up to a factor of 14. The reverse intersystem crossing from the triplet state back to the singlet system is achieved by photoexcitation to higher-excited triplet states, which are, however, prone to photobleaching. We gain insights into the competing pathways of ReISC and photobleaching. The relative efficiencies of these two pathways and the triplet lifetime determine the achievable fluorescence enhancement, which varies strongly with the choice of dye, excitation irradiance and wavelength, and with environmental conditions. The study of ReISC not only results in a better understanding of a fluorescent labels photophysics, but the method is a possible approach to optimize fluorescence emission in experiments, where signal strength is a critical parameter.


Microscopy Research and Technique | 2014

Monitoring triplet state dynamics with fluorescence correlation spectroscopy: Bias and correction

Andreas Schönle; Claas von Middendorff; Christian Ringemann; Stefan W. Hell; Christian Eggeling

A markers dark triplet state is of great importance in fluorescence microscopy: It serves as a means to switch off fluorescent markers and is thus the enabling element for several super‐resolution methods. On the other hand, intersystem‐crossing to the electronic dark triplet state strongly reduces the fluorescence yield in conventional fluorescence microscopy. The ability to determine the kinetic parameters of transitions into the triplet state is thus of great importance and because fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) can be applied without disturbing the system under study, it is one of the preferred methods to do so. However, conventional FCS observations of triplet dynamics suffer from bias due to the spatially inhomogeneous irradiance profile of the excitation laser. Herein, we present a novel method to correct this bias and verify it by analyzing both Monte Carlo simulated and experimental data of the organic dye Rhodamine 110 in aqueous solution for both continuous‐wave and pulsed excitation. Importantly, our approach can be readily generalized to most other FCS experiments that determine intensity dependent kinetic parameters. Microsc. Res. Tech. 77:528–536, 2014.


Biophysical Journal | 2011

STED Nanoscopy Reveals Molecular Details of Cholesterol- and Cytoskeleton-Modulated Lipid Interactions in Living Cells

Veronika Mueller; Christian Ringemann; Alf Honigmann; Günter Schwarzmann; Rebecca Medda; Marcel Leutenegger; Svetlana Polyakova; Vladimir N. Belov; Stefan W. Hell; Christian Eggeling


New Journal of Physics | 2009

Exploring single-molecule dynamics with fluorescence nanoscopy.

Christian Ringemann; Ben Harke; Claas von Middendorff; Rebecca Medda; Alf Honigmann; Richard Wagner; Marcel Leutenegger; Andreas Schönle; Stefan W. Hell; Christian Eggeling


Methods in Enzymology | 2013

FCS in STED microscopy: Studying the nanoscale of lipid membrane dynamics.

Veronika Müller; Alf Honigmann; Christian Ringemann; Rebecca Medda; Günter Schwarzmann; Christian Eggeling


European Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2009

New GM1 ganglioside derivatives for selective single and double labelling of the natural glycosphingolipid skeleton

Svetlana Polyakova; Vladimir N. Belov; Sergey F. Yan; Christian Eggeling; Christian Ringemann; Günter Schwarzmann; Armin de Meijere; Stefan W. Hell


Microscopy Research and Technique | 2007

Reversible photoswitching enables single-molecule fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy at high molecular concentration

Christian Eggeling; Michael Hilbert; Hannes Bock; Christian Ringemann; Michael Hofmann; Andre C. Stiel; Martin Andresen; Stefan Jakobs; Alexander Egner; Andreas Schönle; Stefan W. Hell

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