Mats G. L. Gustafsson
University of California, San Francisco
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Featured researches published by Mats G. L. Gustafsson.
Journal of Microscopy | 2000
Mats G. L. Gustafsson
Lateral resolution that exceeds the classical diffraction limit by a factor of two is achieved by using spatially structured illumination in a wide‐field fluorescence microscope. The sample is illuminated with a series of excitation light patterns, which cause normally inaccessible high‐resolution information to be encoded into the observed image. The recorded images are linearly processed to extract the new information and produce a reconstruction with twice the normal resolution. Unlike confocal microscopy, the resolution improvement is achieved with no need to discard any of the emission light. The method produces images of strikingly increased clarity compared to both conventional and confocal microscopes.
Science | 2008
Lothar Schermelleh; Peter M. Carlton; Sebastian Haase; Lin Shao; Lukman Winoto; Peter Kner; Brian Burke; M. Cristina Cardoso; David A. Agard; Mats G. L. Gustafsson; Heinrich Leonhardt; John W. Sedat
Fluorescence light microscopy allows multicolor visualization of cellular components with high specificity, but its utility has until recently been constrained by the intrinsic limit of spatial resolution. We applied three-dimensional structured illumination microscopy (3D-SIM) to circumvent this limit and to study the mammalian nucleus. By simultaneously imaging chromatin, nuclear lamina, and the nuclear pore complex (NPC), we observed several features that escape detection by conventional microscopy. We could resolve single NPCs that colocalized with channels in the lamin network and peripheral heterochromatin. We could differentially localize distinct NPC components and detect double-layered invaginations of the nuclear envelope in prophase as previously seen only by electron microscopy. Multicolor 3D-SIM opens new and facile possibilities to analyze subcellular structures beyond the diffraction limit of the emitted light.
Biophysical Journal | 2008
Mats G. L. Gustafsson; Lin Shao; Peter M. Carlton; C. J. Rachel Wang; Inna N. Golubovskaya; W. Zacheus Cande; David A. Agard; John W. Sedat
Structured illumination microscopy is a method that can increase the spatial resolution of wide-field fluorescence microscopy beyond its classical limit by using spatially structured illumination light. Here we describe how this method can be applied in three dimensions to double the axial as well as the lateral resolution, with true optical sectioning. A grating is used to generate three mutually coherent light beams, which interfere in the specimen to form an illumination pattern that varies both laterally and axially. The spatially structured excitation intensity causes normally unreachable high-resolution information to become encoded into the observed images through spatial frequency mixing. This new information is computationally extracted and used to generate a three-dimensional reconstruction with twice as high resolution, in all three dimensions, as is possible in a conventional wide-field microscope. The method has been demonstrated on both test objects and biological specimens, and has produced the first light microscopy images of the synaptonemal complex in which the lateral elements are clearly resolved.
Nature Methods | 2009
Peter Kner; Bryant B Chhun; Eric R Griffis; Lukman Winoto; Mats G. L. Gustafsson
Structured-illumination microscopy can double the resolution of the widefield fluorescence microscope but has previously been too slow for dynamic live imaging. Here we demonstrate a high-speed structured-illumination microscope that is capable of 100-nm resolution at frame rates up to 11 Hz for several hundred time points. We demonstrate the microscope by video imaging of tubulin and kinesin dynamics in living Drosophila melanogaster S2 cells in the total internal reflection mode.
Nature Methods | 2011
Lin Shao; Peter Kner; E. Hesper Rego; Mats G. L. Gustafsson
Three-dimensional (3D) structured-illumination microscopy (SIM) can double the lateral and axial resolution of a wide-field fluorescence microscope but has been too slow for live imaging. Here we apply 3D SIM to living samples and record whole cells at up to 5 s per volume for >50 time points with 120-nm lateral and 360-nm axial resolution. We demonstrate the technique by imaging microtubules in S2 cells and mitochondria in HeLa cells.
Nature Methods | 2013
Sara Abrahamsson; Jiji Chen; Bassam Hajj; Sjoerd Stallinga; Alexander Y Katsov; Jan Wisniewski; Gaku Mizuguchi; Pierre Soule; Florian Mueller; Claire Dugast Darzacq; Xavier Darzacq; Carl Wu; Cornelia I. Bargmann; David A. Agard; Maxime Dahan; Mats G. L. Gustafsson
Conventional acquisition of three-dimensional (3D) microscopy data requires sequential z scanning and is often too slow to capture biological events. We report an aberration-corrected multifocus microscopy method capable of producing an instant focal stack of nine 2D images. Appended to an epifluorescence microscope, the multifocus system enables high-resolution 3D imaging in multiple colors with single-molecule sensitivity, at speeds limited by the camera readout time of a single image.
Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 1999
Mats G. L. Gustafsson
Fluorescence microscopy is an essential tool of modern biology, but, like all forms of optical imaging, it is subject to physical limits on its resolving power. In recent years, several exciting techniques have been introduced to exceed these limits, including standing wave microscopy, 4Pi confocal microscopy, I5M and structured illumination microscopy. Several such techniques have been definitively demonstrated for the first time during the past year.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Reto Fiolka; Lin Shao; E. Hesper Rego; Michael W. Davidson; Mats G. L. Gustafsson
Previous implementations of structured-illumination microscopy (SIM) were slow or designed for one-color excitation, sacrificing two unique and extremely beneficial aspects of light microscopy: live-cell imaging in multiple colors. This is especially unfortunate because, among the resolution-extending techniques, SIM is an attractive choice for live-cell imaging; it requires no special fluorophores or high light intensities to achieve twice diffraction-limited resolution in three dimensions. Furthermore, its wide-field nature makes it light-efficient and decouples the acquisition speed from the size of the lateral field of view, meaning that high frame rates over large volumes are possible. Here, we report a previously undescribed SIM setup that is fast enough to record 3D two-color datasets of living whole cells. Using rapidly programmable liquid crystal devices and a flexible 2D grid pattern algorithm to switch between excitation wavelengths quickly, we show volume rates as high as 4 s in one color and 8.5 s in two colors over tens of time points. To demonstrate the capabilities of our microscope, we image a variety of biological structures, including mitochondria, clathrin-coated vesicles, and the actin cytoskeleton, in either HeLa cells or cultured neurons.
IS&T/SPIE's Symposium on Electronic Imaging: Science & Technology | 1995
Mats G. L. Gustafsson; David A. Agard; John W. Sedat
A weakness of standard 3D microscopies--both confocal and widefield+deconvolution-- is that their resolution is substantially worse in the axial direction than in the lateral plane. We describe two new widefield techniques with substantially improved axial resolution that actually exceeds the lateral resolution. As is well known, the resolution is related to the angle over which the objective lens collects light. In our first technique, light is collected over an enlarged set of angles by using two objective lenses on opposite sides of the sample. The two image beams are combined coherently on the same CCD camera. Interference between the beams yields new, previously inaccessible sample information. The second technique applies a similar concept to the illumination light in fluorescence microscopy. Light from an extended, spatially incoherent light source--such as a standard arc lamp--is split and directed through the two opposing objective lenses so as to create a narrow interference fringe at the focal plane in the sample. This spatial structure in the excitation light yields access to new sample information. The two techniques can easily be used together; the combined technique promises an axial resolution improvement of a factor of seven over standard widefield microscopy.
Biophysical Journal | 2008
Lin Shao; Berith Isaac; Satoru Uzawa; David A. Agard; John W. Sedat; Mats G. L. Gustafsson
A new type of wide-field fluorescence microscopy is described, which produces 100-nm-scale spatial resolution in all three dimensions, by using structured illumination in a microscope that has two opposing objective lenses. Illumination light is split by a grating and a beam splitter into six mutually coherent beams, three of which enter the specimen through each objective lens. The resulting illumination intensity pattern contains high spatial frequency components both axially and laterally. In addition, the emission is collected by both objective lenses coherently, and combined interferometrically on a single camera, resulting in a detection transfer function with axially extended support. These two effects combine to produce near-isotropic resolution. Experimental images of test samples and biological specimens confirm the theoretical predictions.