Publication | Closed Access
PALM imaging and cluster analysis of protein heterogeneity at the cell surface
262
Citations
20
References
2010
Year
MicroscopyMolecular BiologyPalm ImagingCellular PhysiologySuper-resolution MicroscopyTissue ImagingImage AnalysisReceptor Tyrosine KinaseCell SurfaceProteomicsCell SignalingBiophysicsNovel Imaging MethodProtein HeterogeneityImmune SynapseCell BiologySignal TransductionMicroscope Image ProcessingNatural SciencesBioimage AnalysisBiomedical ImagingCellular BiochemistryMedicineCell Detection
The authors employed photoactivatable localization microscopy (PALM) and direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (dSTORM) imaging and image analysis based on Ripley's K-function to quantify the distribution and heterogeneity of proteins at the cell plasma membrane. The membrane targeting sequence of the N-terminal region of the T cell receptor-pathway kinase Lck fused to the photo-convertible fluorescent protein tdEos (Lck(N10)-tdEos), clusters into sub-100 nm regions which cover approximately 7% of the cell surface. 2-channel PALM imaging of Lck(N10)-tdEos and the N-terminus of the kinase Src (Src(N15)-PS-CFP2) are demonstrated. Finally, T cell microclusters at the immune synapse are imaged at super-resolution using dSTORM, showing that conventional TIRF images contain unresolved, small clusters. These methods are generally applicable to other cell and fluorophore systems to quantify 2-D molecular clustering at nanometer scales.
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