Modern Instrumentation
Vol.2 No.3(2013), Article ID:34456,8 pages DOI:10.4236/mi.2003.23007

A Low Cost and Versatile STED Superresolution Fluorescent Microscope

Daniel McBride1, Chin Su1, Jun Kameoka1, Stanislav Vitha2

1Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, Texas A&M University, College Station, USA

2Microscopy & Imaging Center, Texas A&M University, College Station, USA

Email: Daniel.Mcbride@tamu.edu

Copyright © 2013 Daniel McBride et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Received May 28, 2013; revised July 1, 2013; accepted July 8, 2013

Keywords: Stimulated Emission-Depletion Microscopy; STED

ABSTRACT

A versatile and inexpensive super-resolution fluorescent microscope that functions as easily as a conventional confocal microscope is described. Components of the microscope were designed on a platform which was placed atop a surplus microscope frame. All optical components and equipments used are given. The excitation and depletion beams are extracted from a compact low-cost supercontinuum light source. The focal spot of the depletion beam at the focal plane is studied and imaged by a 100 nm aperture near-field fiber tip. The collinear excitation and depletion beam focused by a 0.9 numerical aperture microscope objective produce a 90 nm lateral super-resolution as verified by imaging 100 nm diameter fluorescent beads.

1. Introduction

The resolving power of an optical microscope is limited by diffraction effects to about half the wavelength of light. The confocal optical microscope widely used by biologists to examine three-dimensional cellular features has a lateral resolution limit of about 250 nm and an axial resolution limit of 500 nm if a high numerical aperture objective (1.4 NA) is used. In STED microscopy, suppression of florescence emission from dye molecules by stimulated emission effect for breaking the resolution limit was first invented by Stephen Hell in 1994 at the Max Planck Institute [1]. His idea involved the depletion of excited state dye molecules population by a depletion beam via the stimulated emission effect—the same principle responsible for lasing action in lasers. He named the microscope the “STED Microscope”, which stands for Stimulated-Emission-Depletion Microscope [2,3]. Since then STED microscopy has advanced to using birefringent elements to improve resolution and greatly simplify designs [4]. In 2008, Lecia introduced the first comercial STED microscope which had a lateral resolution of 90 nm and currently cost about $700 K. With a novel design, we built a versatile STED microscope that functions like a confocal microscope but is much cheaper.

The basic principle of STED is briefly described. Some formulas that are useful for generating spot images and predicting performances are given in the Appendix. A vortex phase plate [5] placed in the path of a collimated depletion beam that is focused by a microscope objective produces a donut shaped focal spot with a dark region at the center (Figure 1(a)). The fluorescent spot from dye molecules excited by a focused shorter wavelength beam is shown in Figure 1(b). The fluorescent intensity is taken to be proportional to the fluorophore excited state population. If the two spots overlapped, then the excited molecules that reside outside the central dark region will be de-excited to the ground state by the longer wavelength depletion light via the stimulated emission effect, turning the fluorescence off. The resultant emission spot is decreased as shown in Figure 1(c). These spots are calculated using formulas given in the Appendix.

Other noted super-resolution techniques are Saturated Patterned Excitation Microscopy (SPEM) [6], Saturated Structured Illumination Microscopy (SSIM) [7], PALM [8,9] and STORM [10-12]. Their functions rely on different principles. In SPEM and SSIM the sample is illuminated by a periodic optical pattern described by some wave-vector k1. The wave-vector information due to the spatial beat wave-vector between k1 and the k-vector space that describes the specimen feature is measured. The nonlinear behavior of excited molecules due to satu-

(a) (b) (c)

Figure 1. Basic principle of STED. (a) The calculated focal spot of a red depletion beam with a central intensity null, (b) Green fluorescence due to dye molecules excited by a focused shorter wavelength beam, and (c) Resultant emission spot. The image frame is 2 μm × 2 μm.

ration effects increases the k-space and simultaneously decreases the r-space resolution.

The basic principle of PALM and STORM relies on sequential registration of emitting molecules separated by more than the diffraction limit. Their central coordinates are calculated by a fitting algorithm with accuracy better than the diffraction limit. As this procedure repeats, molecules that were turned on in previous cycles will eventually be bleached lessening the likelihood of mistaken molecular positions as the frame accumulation progresses. When sufficient frames have been accumulated, a stack is formed to obtain a superresolution image of the sample. In STORM the photo-switchable probe molecules are switched off between frames using a laser with longer wavelengths [12]. In contrast, STED scans through the sample employing the same method used in confocal microscopy.

2. Optical Setup

The STED design that is used for obtaining superresolution data is given below. Absorption and emission spectra of the particular dye molecules used determines the transmission-reflection spectral characteristics of optical components implemented in the design. Here we image the Invitrogen F8800 100 nm diameter orange fluorescent beads for verification of super-resolution. The extinction (absorption) and emission spectra of F8800 beads is given in Figure 2, and is used for explaining our STED design given in Figure 3 using components appropriate for the fluorescent molecule used.

We describe the detail of the design and relate the design to the particular fluorescent molecules used. The components used in the design are summarized in Table 1. In Figure 3, a low numerical aperture (NA = 0.16) apochromatic microscope objective collimates the light

Figure 2. The extinction (absorption) and emission spectra of F8800 beads.

that exits the fiber end of a supercontinuum white light source or any other light sources that have a fiber connector output (the objective is house in a fixture with a fiber connector input adaptor). The supercontinuum source is the Koheras SuperK Compact model. A higher power supercontinuum source had also been for STED microscopy [13]. The light output of the Koheras Compact model is pulsed with a pulse width of 2 ns and a repetition rate of 25 kHz. The light is first polarized by a polarization beam splitter (PBS). A polarized light is needed so that it can be used in conjunction with the vortex phase plate and the quarter-wave plate to produce a focal spot with a central dark region as will be described below.

The white light is then filtered by a 561/13 nm notch filter that passes all wavelengths except the selected wavelength range within the notch. Wavelengths removed by the notch filter cover the fluorescence wavelength range intended for detection.

Figure 3. Design of the STED microscope. PBS: polarization beam splitter. M: mirror. BS: beam splitter. VPP: vortex phase plate. QWP: quarter wave plate. PMT: photomultiplier.

Table 1. Components used in the microscope.

The selected emission wavelength range for detection is 9 nm centered at 563 nm. These are the wavelengths between the vertical lines as shown in Figure 2 and should be away from the excitation and depletion wavelengths. After the first notch filter, the beam is split by a dichroic beam splitter. A band of short wavelength light below 532 nm is reflected and the rest of the longer wavelength light is transmitted. The dichroic filter chosen here can be used for many different types of dyes. The reflected short wavelength light is used for pumping F8800 beads to its excited states for emission. Although the power level of the Koheras Compact model drops off dramatically for wavelength below 500 nm, the short wavelength light which has a average power level of 0.3 mW still needs to be greatly attenuated (by a factor of 100 in this case) because average power levels beyond a few μW saturates the exited state dye molecules population with no gain in emission signals beyond a few μW. Excessive excitation power only decreases the depletion effect compromising the resolution of the microscope.

The transmitted light through the dichroic filter is filtered by a bandpass filter centered at 628 nm with a passband width of 32 nm. The transmitted light is used for depletion of excited dye molecules. The wider the passband the higher the depletion power available and the better the super-resolution. However, the choice of this bandpass filter with the limited passband width is based on two criteria. First, one notes from Figure 2 that the absorption tail extends well into the longer wavelength region of the emission spectra. The dye absorption at the chosen depletion wavelength of 628 nm and within its passband must be negligible as is the case shown in Figure 2. Second, the passband must not be too broad. Otherwise the central intensity of the depletion spot will not be sufficiently dark. The following notch filter after the bandpass filter is identical to the previous notch filter. It transmits all the light that passes the bandpass filter but will reflect the selected detection wavelength band of light that comes from the fluorescent emission. The vortex phase plate (VPP) plus the subsequent quarter-wave plate shaped the beam that upon focusing by the apochromatic microscope objective with high numerical aperture (0.9), the beam cross-section exhibits a doughnut shape central dark region appropriate for achieving lateral superresolution. The central dark region is due to the cancellation of the z-component of the electric field at the focal plane as described in [14] using the formula in [15]. Since the spatial resolution increases with depletion power [16], ideally, one would like to make use of the maximum depletion power available. However, the performance of the vortex phase plate is wavelength dependent. With the supercontinuum light source, one needs to limit the wavelength range for depletion by employing a bandpass filter as mentioned above. In this work the average depletion power is about 0.9 mW.

The excitation light and the depletion light recombine collinearly at the second dichroic beam splitter as shown. The combined beam is reflected downward by a mirror then focused onto the sample by a microscope objective mounted on the rotating turret of the Olympus model MX 50A-F microscope frame. Initially, the overlapping of the excitation and depletion focal spot is performed by adjustment of mirror M1 and M2 (mounted on Thorlabs precision mirror mount). After the initial adjustment, slight adjustment of only M2 is sometime needed, but usually the spots stay overlapped for a long time (weeks) unless the system is deliberately perturbed. The requirement that the excitation spot and the depletion spot overlap in the image plane placed a tight constraint regarding the tolerable beam-angle shift whenever components need to be substituted when different dyes are to be used. A simple calculation shows that the angular tolerance is only about 3 arc-second for a 50 nm lateral shift at the image plane. Often components that need to be replaced are the notch filters and the bandpass filter when dye molecules are changed. These components can all be quickly replaced without disturbing the alignment of the system because they are all placed in the transmission path. Multiple elements of vortex plates for multiple wavelengths applications are all imprinted on the same wafer. So, they can be rotated into place without shifting the beam. If the dichroic filter is chosen to have a transition wavelength of 530 nm, it does not need to be changed for many dyes.

Fluorescent signal collected by the high NA microscope objective propagates backward, and its path is shown by the dashed line. The fluorescence from the sample retraced the original transmission path to the notch filter at which point it is reflected into the lens tube and then focused into a multimode fiber and measured by the PMT. The 563/9 bandpass filter (not shown) is placed inside the lens tube unit. We use an Olympus WSLM apochromatic water immersion objective with NA = 0.9 for evaluating the super-resolution.

A beam splitter (BS) is placed before the high NA objective and is used in conjunction with the lens tube and the CCD camera to view the sample and monitor the overlapping focal spots at different magnifications by choosing objectives mounted on the microscope turret. The lighting is provided by the original microscope. The beam splitter is slide away when image scan is to be taken so that a maximum depletion power can be applied to achieve the best resolution. Imaging is taken by translating the sample. The original translation platform is removed and replaced by the Melles Griot nano-translator model NanoMax 17Max600/L with 10 nm resolution. We control the nano-translator and the PMT by LabView programs. All components mentioned above except for the PMT and the supercontinuum light source are secured to a common platform. The whole platform replaces the original lens tube platform on top of the Olympus MX 50 microscope (Figure 4). Any other light sources with a fiber connector output can be connected to the 0.16 NA objective unit on the platform. Thus, the whole system functions like a confocal microscope and are very easy to use and is very stable. A picture of our microscope is shown in Figure 4.

3. Experiments

In order to achieve super-resolution the donut shaped focal spot from the depletion beam must exhibit good quality and have a sufficiently dark central region. Since the central dark region is due to the cancellation of the z-component of the electric field as mentioned above, one cannot judge the quality of the central dark region by observing the focal spot from the CCD camera because the image spot at the camera is not tightly focus and the z-component of the electric field is small anyway. Thus, a good dark central region observed on the camera does not guarantee a sufficiently dark central region of a tightly focused spot created by a high numerical aperture apochromatic objective. We found that a 100 nm aperture NSOM fiber tip can be used for imaging the focal spot,

Figure 4. The STED microscope with components mounted on top of a surplus microscope.

but a 50 nm aperture NSOM fiber tip cannot because the light coupled into the tip is insufficient for producing an image. The straight NSOM fiber tip from Nanonics was inserted inside a standard fiber optic ferrule for protection. Standard fiber optic technologies can then be used for positioning the NSOM fiber and measuring the signal coupled into the fiber tip. Once the tip is protected by the fiber optic ferrule, this method offers better repeatability and is less time consuming to implement than the normal method which uses the light scattered off a nano-particle or a fluorescent bead for imaging the focal spot [14,16]. Figure 5(a) shows a 2 μm × 2 μm image of the focal spot by x-y scan of the NSOM fiber tip.

The central dark region of the depletion beam spot is verified. Also shown on the right is the horizontal line plot of the intensity profile across the central dark region. A convolution calculation taking into account the 100 nm aperture of the NSOM fiber tip, gives essentially an intensity of zero at the center of the dark region. Note that an Airy ring is also visible. Figure 5(b) shows the image of the focal spot if the vortex phase plate is removed. The spot is quite uniform with a central intensity maximum as it should be. A line plot of the intensity is also given. The optical components listed in Table 1 give excellent beam quality for achieving the required characteristics of the depletion spot.

For verifying the super-resolution with 100 nm diameter F8800 fluorescent beads, the beads are attached to a cover glass and embedded in agarose gel on microscope slides. The sample is placed on the nano-translator

(a)(b)

Figure 5. (a) Image of a 2 μm × 2 μm scan of the focal spot of the depletion beam using an UPlanApo dry apochromatic objective with numerical aperture of 0.85. The intensity plot through the central dark region is also given. (b) Image of the focal spot if the VPP is removed.

for scanning. The objective with the highest numerical aperture available to us is the Olympus WLSM 40× water immersion apochromatic objective with NA = 0.9. Figure 6(a) shows a fluorescent image using this objective for the case with the depletion beam blocked. Figure 6(b) is the image with the VPP in position revealing two clumps of beads.

Note that the peak intensity remains about the same with or without the depletion beam, only the width decrease because the center of the depletion beam is dark. With the 0.9 NA objective, a convoluted lateral superresolution of about 90 nm is achieved accounting for a bead size of at least 100 nm. Note that the focal spot size should decrease with objective’s NA. The decrease in focal spot size increases the optical intensity, giving a better depletion effect. Therefore, using a higher NA objective such as the oil immersion apochromatic objective with NA = 1.4 ($9 K), the estimated resolution should be about 40 nm accounting for the two factors.

4. Conclusion

An inexpensive and versatile super-resolution fluorescent microscope was described. The microscope functions easily as a conventional confocal microscope. The components of the microscope were designed on a platform that was placed atop a surplus microscope frame. The excitation and depletion beams were extracted from a compact low-cost supercontinuum light source. Other light sources can be used by simply connecting its light output to the fiber receptacle of the objective’s housing unit. The focal spot of the depletion beam at the focal plane was studied and imaged by a 100 nm aperture near-field fiber tip. The collinear excitation and depletion

(a) (b)

Figure 6. (a) 3 μm × 3 μm scan of beads with depletion beam off. (b) Same scan as (a) with depletion beam on, revealing two clumps of beads. Bottom graphs show horizontal line scans through emission spots indicated in the image above.

beam focused by a 0.9 numerical aperture microscope objective produced a 90 nm later super-resolution after performing a convolution as verified by imaging 100 nm diameter fluorescent beads. The total cost of the project is about $38K with the bulk of the cost coming from the supercontinuum source ($20 K), the nano-translator ($11 K) and the apochromatic microscope objective ($7 K).

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Appendix

1. Formulas for Calculating the Electric Field near the Focus of a Microscope Objective

The general formulas that can be used to write computer codes for calculating the focal image are given below. These basic formulas are given in [15]. Here we extend the result of [15] by including the effect of phase plates placed in the object plane of a microscope objective. We also substitute a plane wave in the object plane by a more realistic wave described by a Gaussian distribution.

The positive z-direction is the axial direction of the microscope objective lens through the lens’ center and away from the objective in the image plane. A point in the image plane is defined by spherical coordinates, (R, Θ, Φ). A common function to be used is,

(1)

where, , λ is the wavelength and n is the refractive index of the immersion medium at the objective. are variables of integration.

For incident light polarization in the x-direction, the x, y and z component of the electric field Ex, Ey, Ez at any point in the image plane is described by (asides from a proportion factor),

(2a)

(2b)

(2c)

where Gx, Gy, and Gz in (2a)-(2c) are given by,

(3a)

(3b)

(3c)

The θ integration limit α is given by,

(4)

where NA is the numerical aperture of the microscope objective.

Generally, are arbitrary functions describing the effect of the phase-plate placed in the object space. For a vortex phase plate,

(5a)

And for a Gaussian intensity distribution without a θ dependent phase plate,

(5b)

D is the aperture diameter of the objective at its back focal plane, and where W is the half-intensity width of the collimated beam entering the objective.

For incident light polarization in the y direction, the expression for Ex, Ey, Ez are same as (2a)-(2c) except that Gx, Gy, and Gz are given by (6a)-(6c),

(6a)

(6b)

(6c)

If the incident polarization has equal magnitude in the x and y direction, then the total intensity profile, I, near the focus is given by,

(7)

where is the vector sum of the electric field at the image plane (2a)-(2c) due to the x component of the incident electric field in the object space and is the vector sum due to the y-component. The phase factor, , accounts for the phase shift between and due to the quarter wave-plate.

2. Rate Equations for Describing the Depletion Effects

In principle the depletion effects can be predicted by rate equations that describe transitions between excited and ground molecule states. The main parameters needed are the absorption and emission cross-section. It is known that if the molecule consists of only a band of singlet states, then it is possible to define a single spectral dependent effective emission and effective absorption cross-section, and the emission and absorption crosssections are related by the well-known Einstein relations with a single fitting parameter. The cross-sections can then be determined by fitting to the given absorption spectra and the measured spontaneous lifetime. However, dye molecule energy states are very complicated, generally consisting of singlet and triplet states. Exact rate equation description is unrealistic. Nevertheless, only for qualitative description purpose, we simply assume an absorption cross-section σ12 and a emission cross-section σ21. We also assume that the excited states and the ground states molecular density consist of the sum of all the states in its manifold. The calculated results presented in Figure 1(c) use these assumptions.

The rate equation describing the excited state population N2 is given by,

(8)

(9)

N1 is the ground state population, and N is the total molecular density. λe and λD are the excitation wavelength and depletion wavelength, respectively. Their corresponding frequencies are υe and υD. σ12e) and σ21D) are the absorption and emission cross-sections at the excitation and depletion wavelengths, respectively. τ is the spontaneous lifetime. Pe(r,t) is the excitation power, and PD(r,t) is the depletion power. Their spatial dependence is calculated from the formulas given above. The time dependence occurs because the laser is pulsed. Since the cross-section of molecules is approximately 1 × 10−16 cm2, we assume this number for σ12 and σ21. The image of Figure 1(c) is obtained by solving (8) and (9), with the spatial intensity given by.