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Dive into the research topics where Steffen J. Sahl is active.

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Featured researches published by Steffen J. Sahl.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Fast molecular tracking maps nanoscale dynamics of plasma membrane lipids

Steffen J. Sahl; Marcel Leutenegger; Michael Hilbert; Stefan W. Hell; Christian Eggeling

We describe an optical method capable of tracking a single fluorescent molecule with a flexible choice of high spatial accuracy (∼10–20 nm standard deviation or ∼20–40 nm full-width-at-half-maximum) and temporal resolution (< 1 ms). The fluorescence signal during individual passages of fluorescent molecules through a spot of excitation light allows the sequential localization and thus spatio-temporal tracking of the molecule if its fluorescence is collected on at least three separate point detectors arranged in close proximity. We show two-dimensional trajectories of individual, small organic dye labeled lipids diffusing in the plasma membrane of living cells and directly observe transient events of trapping on < 20 nm spatial scales. The trapping is cholesterol-assisted and much more pronounced for a sphingo- than for a phosphoglycero-lipid, with average trapping times of ∼15 ms and < 4 ms, respectively. The results support previous STED nanoscopy measurements and suggest that, at least for nontreated cells, the transient interaction of a single lipid is confined to macromolecular dimensions. Our experimental approach demonstrates that fast molecular movements can be tracked with minimal invasion, which can reveal new important details of cellular nano-organization.


Journal of Physics D | 2015

The 2015 super-resolution microscopy roadmap.

Stefan W. Hell; Steffen J. Sahl; Mark Bates; Xiaowei Zhuang; Rainer Heintzmann; Martin J. Booth; Joerg Bewersdorf; Gleb Shtengel; Harald F. Hess; Philip Tinnefeld; Alf Honigmann; Stefan Jakobs; Ilaria Testa; Laurent Cognet; Brahim Lounis; Helge Ewers; Simon J. Davis; Christian Eggeling; David Klenerman; Katrin I. Willig; Giuseppe Vicidomini; Marco Castello; Alberto Diaspro; Thorben Cordes

Far-field optical microscopy using focused light is an important tool in a number of scientific disciplines including chemical, (bio) physical and biomedical research, particularly with respect to ...


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Simultaneous, accurate measurement of the 3D position and orientation of single molecules

Mikael P. Backlund; Matthew D. Lew; Adam S. Backer; Steffen J. Sahl; Ginni Grover; Anurag Agrawal; Rafael Piestun; W. E. Moerner

Recently, single molecule-based superresolution fluorescence microscopy has surpassed the diffraction limit to improve resolution to the order of 20 nm or better. These methods typically use image fitting that assumes an isotropic emission pattern from the single emitters as well as control of the emitter concentration. However, anisotropic single-molecule emission patterns arise from the transition dipole when it is rotationally immobile, depending highly on the molecule’s 3D orientation and z position. Failure to account for this fact can lead to significant lateral (x, y) mislocalizations (up to ∼50–200 nm). This systematic error can cause distortions in the reconstructed images, which can translate into degraded resolution. Using parameters uniquely inherent in the double-lobed nature of the Double-Helix Point Spread Function, we account for such mislocalizations and simultaneously measure 3D molecular orientation and 3D position. Mislocalizations during an axial scan of a single molecule manifest themselves as an apparent lateral shift in its position, which causes the standard deviation (SD) of its lateral position to appear larger than the SD expected from photon shot noise. By correcting each localization based on an estimated orientation, we are able to improve SDs in lateral localization from ∼2× worse than photon-limited precision (48 vs. 25 nm) to within 5 nm of photon-limited precision. Furthermore, by averaging many estimations of orientation over different depths, we are able to improve from a lateral SD of 116 (∼4× worse than the photon-limited precision; 28 nm) to 34 nm (within 6 nm of the photon limit).


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2013

Super-resolution fluorescence imaging with single molecules.

Steffen J. Sahl; W. E. Moerner

The ability to detect, image and localize single molecules optically with high spatial precision by their fluorescence enables an emergent class of super-resolution microscopy methods which have overcome the longstanding diffraction barrier for far-field light-focusing optics. Achieving spatial resolutions of 20-40nm or better in both fixed and living cells, these methods are currently being established as powerful tools for minimally-invasive spatiotemporal analysis of structural details in cellular processes which benefit from enhanced resolution. Briefly covering the basic principles, this short review then summarizes key recent developments and application examples of two-dimensional and three-dimensional (3D) multi-color techniques and faster time-lapse schemes. The prospects for quantitative imaging - in terms of improved ability to correct for dipole-emission-induced systematic localization errors and to provide accurate counts of molecular copy numbers within nanoscale cellular domains - are discussed.


Nature Communications | 2015

STED nanoscopy with fluorescent quantum dots

Janina Hanne; Henning J. Falk; Frederik Görlitz; Patrick Hoyer; Johann Engelhardt; Steffen J. Sahl; Stefan W. Hell

The widely popular class of quantum-dot molecular labels could so far not be utilized as standard fluorescent probes in STED (stimulated emission depletion) nanoscopy. This is because broad quantum-dot excitation spectra extend deeply into the spectral bands used for STED, thus compromising the transient fluorescence silencing required for attaining super-resolution. Here we report the discovery that STED nanoscopy of several red-emitting commercially available quantum dots is in fact successfully realized by the increasingly popular 775 nm STED laser light. A resolution of presently ∼50 nm is demonstrated for single quantum dots, and sub-diffraction resolution is further shown for imaging of quantum-dot-labelled vimentin filaments in fibroblasts. The high quantum-dot photostability enables repeated STED recordings with >1,000 frames. In addition, we have evidence that the tendency of quantum-dot labels to blink is largely suppressed by combined action of excitation and STED beams. Quantum-dot STED significantly expands the realm of application of STED nanoscopy, and, given the high stability of these probes, holds promise for extended time-lapse imaging.


Biophysical Journal | 2012

STED Microscopy with Optimized Labeling Density Reveals 9-Fold Arrangement of a Centriole Protein

Lana Lau; Yin Loon Lee; Steffen J. Sahl; Tim Stearns; W. E. Moerner

Super-resolution fluorescence microscopy can achieve resolution beyond the optical diffraction limit, partially closing the gap between conventional optical imaging and electron microscopy for elucidation of subcellular architecture. The centriole, a key component of the cellular control and division machinery, is 250 nm in diameter, a spatial scale where super-resolution methods such as stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy can provide previously unobtainable detail. We use STED with a resolution of 60 nm to demonstrate that the centriole distal appendage protein Cep164 localizes in nine clusters spaced around a ring of ∼300 nm in diameter, and quantify the influence of the labeling density in STED immunofluorescence microscopy. We find that the labeling density dramatically influences the observed number, size, and brightness of labeled Cep164 clusters, and estimate the average number of secondary antibody labels per cluster. The arrangements are morphologically similar in centrioles of both proliferating cells and differentiated multiciliated cells, suggesting a relationship of this structure to function. Our STED measurements in single centrioles are consistent with results obtained by electron microscopy, which involve ensemble averaging or very different sample preparation conditions, suggesting that we have arrived at a direct measurement of a centriole protein by careful optimization of the labeling density.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Cellular Inclusion Bodies of Mutant Huntingtin Exon 1 Obscure Small Fibrillar Aggregate Species

Steffen J. Sahl; Lucien E. Weiss; Whitney C. Duim; Judith Frydman; W. E. Moerner

The identities of toxic aggregate species in Huntingtons disease pathogenesis remain ambiguous. While polyQ-expanded huntingtin (Htt) is known to accumulate in compact inclusion bodies inside neurons, this is widely thought to be a protective coping response that sequesters misfolded conformations or aggregated states of the mutated protein. To define the spatial distributions of fluorescently-labeled Htt-exon1 species in the cell model PC12m, we employed highly sensitive single-molecule super-resolution fluorescence imaging. In addition to inclusion bodies and the diffuse pool of monomers and oligomers, fibrillar aggregates ~100 nm in diameter and up to ~1–2 µm in length were observed for pathogenic polyQ tracts (46 and 97 repeats) after targeted photo-bleaching of the inclusion bodies. These short structures bear a striking resemblance to fibers described in vitro. Definition of the diverse Htt structures in cells will provide an avenue to link the impact of therapeutic agents to aggregate populations and morphologies.


ChemPhysChem | 2014

The Role of Molecular Dipole Orientation in Single‐Molecule Fluorescence Microscopy and Implications for Super‐Resolution Imaging

Mikael P. Backlund; Matthew D. Lew; Adam S. Backer; Steffen J. Sahl; W. E. Moerner

Numerous methods for determining the orientation of single-molecule transition dipole moments from microscopic images of the molecular fluorescence have been developed in recent years. At the same time, techniques that rely on nanometer-level accuracy in the determination of molecular position, such as single-molecule super-resolution imaging, have proven immensely successful in their ability to access unprecedented levels of detail and resolution previously hidden by the optical diffraction limit. However, the level of accuracy in the determination of position is threatened by insufficient treatment of molecular orientation. Here we review a number of methods for measuring molecular orientation using fluorescence microscopy, focusing on approaches that are most compatible with position estimation and single-molecule super-resolution imaging. We highlight recent methods based on quadrated pupil imaging and on double-helix point spread function microscopy and apply them to the study of fluorophore mobility on immunolabeled microtubules.


Nano Letters | 2015

Precise Three-Dimensional Scan-Free Multiple-Particle Tracking over Large Axial Ranges with Tetrapod Point Spread Functions

Yoav Shechtman; Lucien E. Weiss; Adam S. Backer; Steffen J. Sahl; W. E. Moerner

We employ a novel framework for information-optimal microscopy to design a family of point spread functions (PSFs), the Tetrapod PSFs, which enable high-precision localization of nanoscale emitters in three dimensions over customizable axial (z) ranges of up to 20 μm with a high numerical aperture objective lens. To illustrate, we perform flow profiling in a microfluidic channel and show scan-free tracking of single quantum-dot-labeled phospholipid molecules on the surface of living, thick mammalian cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Single-molecule imaging of Hedgehog pathway protein Smoothened in primary cilia reveals binding events regulated by Patched1

Ljiljana Milenkovic; Lucien E. Weiss; Joshua Yoon; Theodore L. Roth; YouRong S. Su; Steffen J. Sahl; Matthew P. Scott; W. E. Moerner

Significance In vertebrates, the transmembrane protein Smoothened (Smo) accumulates in the ciliary membrane when cells receive the Hedgehog (Hh) signal. The presence of Smo in primary cilia at baseline conditions has been postulated, but not directly observed. We used highly sensitive single-molecule imaging in live cells to track and analyze the dynamics of individual Smo molecules in cilia, not only after treatment with pathway agonists but also at low, baseline levels. In both conditions, Smo molecules bind at distinct sites at the bases of cilia, but with different dissociation constants. The results provide mechanistic insight into the Hh signal transduction and highlight the distinct compartmentalization of Smo behavior within cilia, which is normally masked by the bulk distribution in ensemble measurements. Accumulation of the signaling protein Smoothened (Smo) in the membrane of primary cilia is an essential step in Hedgehog (Hh) signal transduction, yet the molecular mechanisms of Smo movement and localization are poorly understood. Using ultrasensitive single-molecule tracking with high spatial/temporal precision (30 nm/10 ms), we discovered that binding events disrupt the primarily diffusive movement of Smo in cilia at an array of sites near the base. The affinity of Smo for these binding sites was modulated by the Hh pathway activation state. Activation, by either a ligand or genetic loss of the negatively acting Hh receptor Patched-1 (Ptch), reduced the affinity and frequency of Smo binding at the base. Our findings quantify activation-dependent changes in Smo dynamics in cilia and highlight a previously unknown step in Hh pathway activation.

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Johann Engelhardt

German Cancer Research Center

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