Published 2015
| Version v1
Publication
THE ROUTE FROM SUPER-RESOLUTION TO THE NOBEL PRIZE 2014
Description
Super-resolution or super resolved fluorescence microscopy, as indicated in the Chemistry
Nobel Prize 2014 awarded to Eric Betzig, Stefan W. Hell and William Moerner, includes
those microscopy techniques that increase the resolving ability of a light microscope well
beyond the classical limits dictated by the diffraction barrier [1]. Since the end of the 19th
century Ernst Abbe (1873) and Lord Rayleigh (1896) clarified the reasons such a limit that
makes/made impossible to resolve two elements of a structure when they are closer to each
other than approximately ½ λ in the lateral (x,y) plane and ≈λ
along the axial direction (z).
So far, several methodologies have been developed over the past several years for superresolution
fluorescence microscopy including saturated structured-illumination microscopy
(SSIM), stimulated emission depletion microscopy (STED), photoactivated localization
microscopy (PALM), fluorescence photoactivation localization microscopy (FPALM), and
stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM). Such a development had some
important "gregarios/sparring partners" in computational optical sectioning microscopy,
confocal and two-photon laser scanning microscopy, scanning near-field optical microscopy,
green fluorescent proteins advent and information communication approaches. The list is not
complete. Resolution improvements have been made with confocal and multiphoton
microscopy, as well with approaches like 4PI and I5M. However, in general, approaches
dealing with resolution improvements remained confined by Abbe's and Rayleigh's
prescriptions. We can also see the limit as set by concepts of information theory. I like to
mention the Toraldo di Francia approach related to super resolution [2] as starting point, and
to go across all those attempts and improvements predicted and implemented within the
scientific community focused on optical microscopy [3]. What is revolutionary today, in my
view, is the fact that there is theoretically no limit for capturing details by means of an optical
microscope and that, at the very same time, there is the possibility of tuning the spatial
resolution according to the scientific question posed.
In the style of Johannes Faber referred to the Galileo Galilei's occhialino [4], one can modify
the sentence "microscopium nominare libuit" in "nanoscopium nominare libuit" for the superresolution
fluorescence microscope that has become a nanoscope.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/813089
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/813089