Direct-laser writing for subnanometer focusing and single-molecule imaging

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Abstract

Two-photon direct laser writing is an additive fabrication process that utilizes two-photon absorption of tightly focused femtosecond laser pulses to implement spatially controlled polymerization of a liquid-phase photoresist. Two-photon direct laser writing is capable of nanofabricating arbitrary three-dimensional structures with nanometer accuracy. Here, we explore direct laser writing for high-resolution optical microscopy by fabricating unique 3D optical fiducials for single-molecule tracking and 3D single-molecule localization microscopy. By having control over the position and three-dimensional architecture of the fiducials, we improve axial discrimination and demonstrate isotropic subnanometer 3D focusing (<0.8 nm) over tens of micrometers using a standard inverted microscope. We perform 3D single-molecule acquisitions over cellular volumes, unsupervised data acquisition and live-cell single-particle tracking with nanometer accuracy.

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Coelho, S., Baek, J., Walsh, J., Justin Gooding, J., & Gaus, K. (2022). Direct-laser writing for subnanometer focusing and single-molecule imaging. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28219-6

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