Abstract
Live video recording of intracellular material transport is a promising means of deciphering the fascinating underlying mechanisms driving life at the molecular level. Such technology holds the key to realizing real-time observation at appropriate resolutions in three-dimensional (3D) space within living cells. Here, we report an optical microscopic method for probing endosomal dynamics with proper spatiotemporal resolution within 3D space in live cells: plasmonic dark-field STORM (pdf-STORM). We first confirmed that pdf-STORM has a spatial resolution comparable to that of scanning electron microscopy. Additionally, by observing two optical probes within a single organelle, we were able to track rotational movements and demonstrate the feasibility of using pdf-STORM to observe the angular displacements of an endosome during a "tug-of-war" over an extended period. Finally, we show various biophysical parameters of the hitherto unelucidated dynamics of endosomes-angular displacement is discontinuous and y-axis movement predominates and follows a long-tail distribution.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Jin, S., Park, J., Lee, W. J., Ahn, Y., Park, Y., Park, M., … Seo, D. (2022). Two GPSes in a Ball: Deciphering the Endosomal Tug-of-War Using Plasmonic Dark-Field STORM. JACS Au, 2(7), 1596–1603. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacsau.2c00180
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.