The 21st century has opened with the development of several strategies to push the spatial resolution of far-field fluorescence microscopy beyond the diffraction limit. Among all these super-resolved techniques, stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy stands out for its general principles and its fast acquisition capability. However, the application of STED microscopy to live-cell imaging has been limited by the typically high illuminationpowers required by early implementations of the technique. One way to preserve the effective resolution of a STED microscope, but with a significant reduction of the illumination intensity, is by using the nanosecond fluorescence dynamics information contained in a time-resolved STED experiment. Two different implementations exploring this idea have been demonstrated so far, respectively the so-called gated-STED (g-STED) microscopy and Separation of Photons by Lifetime Tuning (SPLIT)-STED microscopy. Here we discuss the common principle behind the two methods and the benefits and major differences between the two implementations.
CITATION STYLE
Lanzano, L., Vicidomini, G., Scipioni, L., Castello, M., & Diaspro, A. (2018). STED microscopy: Exploring fluorescence lifetime gradients for super-resolution at reduced illumination intensities. In Multiphoton Microscopy and Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging: Applications in Biology and Medicine (pp. 85–102). Walter de Gruyter GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110429985-007
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