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Dive into the research topics where Marissa K. Lee is active.

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Featured researches published by Marissa K. Lee.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Three-dimensional superresolution colocalization of intracellular protein superstructures and the cell surface in live Caulobacter crescentus

Matthew D. Lew; Steven F. Lee; Jerod L. Ptacin; Marissa K. Lee; Robert J. Twieg; Lucy Shapiro; W. E. Moerner

Recently, single-molecule imaging and photocontrol have enabled superresolution optical microscopy of cellular structures beyond Abbe’s diffraction limit, extending the frontier of noninvasive imaging of structures within living cells. However, live-cell superresolution imaging has been challenged by the need to image three-dimensional (3D) structures relative to their biological context, such as the cellular membrane. We have developed a technique, termed superresolution by power-dependent active intermittency and points accumulation for imaging in nanoscale topography (SPRAIPAINT) that combines imaging of intracellular enhanced YFP (eYFP) fusions (SPRAI) with stochastic localization of the cell surface (PAINT) to image two different fluorophores sequentially with only one laser. Simple light-induced blinking of eYFP and collisional flux onto the cell surface by Nile red are used to achieve single-molecule localizations, without any antibody labeling, cell membrane permeabilization, or thiol-oxygen scavenger systems required. Here we demonstrate live-cell 3D superresolution imaging of Crescentin-eYFP, a cytoskeletal fluorescent protein fusion, colocalized with the surface of the bacterium Caulobacter crescentus using a double-helix point spread function microscope. Three-dimensional colocalization of intracellular protein structures and the cell surface with superresolution optical microscopy opens the door for the analysis of protein interactions in living cells with excellent precision (20–40 nm in 3D) over a large field of view (12 × 12 μm).


Nano Letters | 2013

Quantitative multicolor subdiffraction imaging of bacterial protein ultrastructures in three dimensions.

Andreas Gahlmann; Jerod L. Ptacin; Ginni Grover; Sean Quirin; Alexander R. von Diezmann; Marissa K. Lee; Mikael P. Backlund; Lucy Shapiro; Rafael Piestun; W. E. Moerner

We demonstrate quantitative multicolor three-dimensional (3D) subdiffraction imaging of the structural arrangement of fluorescent protein fusions in living Caulobacter crescentus bacteria. Given single-molecule localization precisions of 20-40 nm, a flexible locally weighted image registration algorithm is critical to accurately combine the super-resolution data with <10 nm error. Surface-relief dielectric phase masks implement a double-helix response at two wavelengths to distinguish two different fluorescent labels and to quantitatively and precisely localize them relative to each other in 3D.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Small-Molecule Labeling of Live Cell Surfaces for Three-Dimensional Super-Resolution Microscopy

Marissa K. Lee; Prabin Rai; Jarrod C. Williams; Robert J. Twieg; W. E. Moerner

Precise imaging of the cell surface of fluorescently labeled bacteria requires super-resolution methods because the size-scale of these cells is on the order of the diffraction limit. In this work, we present a photocontrollable small-molecule rhodamine spirolactam emitter suitable for non-toxic and specific labeling of the outer surface of cells for three-dimensional (3D) super-resolution (SR) imaging. Conventional rhodamine spirolactams photoswitch to the emitting form with UV light; however, these wavelengths can damage cells. We extended photoswitching to visible wavelengths >400 nm by iterative synthesis and spectroscopic characterization to optimize the substitution on the spirolactam. Further, an N-hydroxysuccinimide-functionalized derivative enabled covalent labeling of amines on the surface of live Caulobacter crescentus cells. Resulting 3D SR reconstructions of the labeled cell surface reveal uniform and specific sampling with thousands of localizations per cell and excellent localization precision in x, y, and z. The distribution of cell stalk lengths (a sub-diffraction-sized cellular structure) was quantified for a mixed population of cells. Pulse-chase experiments identified sites of cell surface growth. Covalent labeling with the optimized rhodamine spirolactam label provides a general strategy to study the surfaces of living cells with high specificity and resolution down to 10–20 nm.


Chemical Science | 2013

Enzymatic activation of nitro-aryl fluorogens in live bacterial cells for enzymatic turnover-activated localization microscopy

Marissa K. Lee; Jarrod C. Williams; Robert J. Twieg; Jianghong Rao; W. E. Moerner

Many modern super-resolution imaging methods based on single-molecule fluorescence require the conversion of a dark fluorogen into a bright emitter to control emitter concentration. We have synthesized and characterized a nitro-aryl fluorogen which can be converted by a nitroreductase enzyme into a bright push-pull red-emitting fluorophore. Synthesis of model compounds and optical spectroscopy identify a hydroxyl-amino derivative as the product fluorophore, which is bright and detectable on the single-molecule level for fluorogens attached to a surface. Solution kinetic analysis shows Michaelis-Menten rate dependence upon both NADH and the fluorogen concentrations as expected. The generation of low concentrations of single-molecule emitters by enzymatic turnovers is used to extract subdiffraction information about localizations of both fluorophores and nitroreductase enzymes in cells. Enzymatic Turnover Activated Localization Microscopy (ETALM) is a complementary mechanism to photoactivation and blinking for controlling the emission of single molecules to image beyond the diffraction limit.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Spatial organization and dynamics of RNase E and ribosomes in Caulobacter crescentus

Camille Bayas; Jiarui Wang; Marissa K. Lee; Jared M. Schrader; Lucy Shapiro; W. E. Moerner

Significance Regulated gene expression involves accurate subcellular positioning and timing of RNA synthesis, degradation, processing, and translation. RNase E is an endoribonuclease that forms the scaffold of the RNA degradosome in bacteria, responsible for the majority of mRNA turnover and RNA processing. We used 3D superresolution microscopy and single-particle tracking to quantify the spatial distribution and dynamics of RNase E and ribosomes in the asymmetrically dividing bacterium Caulobacter crescentus. Our results show that active transcription and RNA substrate availability facilitate confinement and clustering of both RNase E and ribosomes. RNase E clusters colocalized with the subcellular position of the two Caulobacter rRNA gene chromosomal loci, indicating that RNA processing can be spatially organized in a bacterium according to its transcriptional profile. We report the dynamic spatial organization of Caulobacter crescentus RNase E (RNA degradosome) and ribosomal protein L1 (ribosome) using 3D single-particle tracking and superresolution microscopy. RNase E formed clusters along the central axis of the cell, while weak clusters of ribosomal protein L1 were deployed throughout the cytoplasm. These results contrast with RNase E and ribosome distribution in Escherichia coli, where RNase E colocalizes with the cytoplasmic membrane and ribosomes accumulate in polar nucleoid-free zones. For both RNase E and ribosomes in Caulobacter, we observed a decrease in confinement and clustering upon transcription inhibition and subsequent depletion of nascent RNA, suggesting that RNA substrate availability for processing, degradation, and translation facilitates confinement and clustering. Importantly, RNase E cluster positions correlated with the subcellular location of chromosomal loci of two highly transcribed rRNA genes, suggesting that RNase E’s function in rRNA processing occurs at the site of rRNA synthesis. Thus, components of the RNA degradosome and ribosome assembly are spatiotemporally organized in Caulobacter, with chromosomal readout serving as the template for this organization.


Frontiers in Optics 2009/Laser Science XXV/Fall 2009 OSA Optics & Photonics Technical Digest (2009), paper LSWD2 | 2009

Photoactivatable Push-Pull Fluorophores for Single-Molecule Imaging in and out of Cells

Samuel J. Lord; Hsiao-lu D. Lee; Nicholas R. Conley; Marissa K. Lee; Michael A. Thompson; Reichel Samuel; Ryan Weber; Na Liu; Robert J. Twieg; W. E. Moerner

We have designed a series of photoactivatable push-pull organic fluorophores, single molecules of which can be imaged in living cells. Photoactivatable probes are needed for superresolution imaging schemes that require active control of single-molecule emission.


Biophysical Journal | 2018

Spatial Organization and Dynamics of RNA Processing in Caulobacter Crescentus

Camille Bayas; Jiarui Wang; Marissa K. Lee; Jared M. Schrader; Lucy Shapiro; W. E. Moerner


Biophysical Journal | 2016

Three-Dimensional Super-Resolution Imaging of the RNA Degradation Machinery in Caulobacter Crescentus

Camille Bayas; Jared M. Schrader; Marissa K. Lee; Lucy Shapiro; W. E. Moerner


Biophysical Journal | 2014

Quantifying the Spatial Organization of Bacterial Ribosomes using Three-Dimensional Super-Resolution Microscopy

Marissa K. Lee; Jared M. Schrader; Gene-Wei Li; Jonathan S. Weissman; Harley H. McAdams; Lucy Shapiro; W. E. Moerner


Frontiers in Optics | 2011

Super-Resolution 3D Co-Localization of Protein Superstructures and the Cellular Surface in Live Caulobacter crescentus

Matthew D. Lew; Steven F. Lee; Jerod L. Ptacin; Marissa K. Lee; Lucy Shapiro; W. E. Moerner

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