Rates of excitation, emission, ISC
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1 Bi177 Lecture 4 Fluorescence Microscopy Phenomenon of Fluorescence Energy Diagram Rates of excitation, emission, ISC Practical Issues Lighting, Filters More on diffraction Point Spread Functions
2 Thus Far, have considered compound microscope, and the microscope optics as a projection system (into eye) Deliver light to the specimen Image light from the specimen Contrast from light absorbed, scattered
3 Transmitted light microscopy: photons out of the microscope are some fraction of the photons in Now, turn our attention to fluorescence, based on the absorption and re-emission of photons Fluorescent Dye Dipole antenna Delocalized electrons Longer dipole, longer λ
4 A good dye must absorb light well (high extinction coef.) Dye in cuvette Blue light absorbed Light absorbed 490nm Beer s Law I out = I in e -ax I absorbed = I out - I in = I in (1-e - εcx ) ε = extinction coefficient For Fluorescein ε ~ 70,000/(cm M/liter) Wavelength
5 Where does energy go? Green light emitted Blue light absorbed Quantum Yield = light emitted/light absorbed 490nm Stokes Shift 520nm Q ~ 0.8 fluorescein ~ 0.3 rhodamine
6 Co-fluorescein Co-TM rhodamine
7 Which dye is better? 1 - absorb well (high ε ) 2 - emit well (high Q) Brightness ~ εq (fluorescein 0.8 * 70,000 = 57,000) (rhodamine 0.3 * 90,000 = 27,000)
8 Go deeper to explain bleaching and background (Jablonski diagram) 4nsec Other losses 0.8 emitted Heat Energy transfer
9 Add in Interstate Crossing (ISC) ISC ~0.03 4nsec 0.8 emitted fluorescence Excited triplet state Phosphorescence (usec - msec) Triplet state is long lived. therefore even low probability can deplete active dye (steady state reached in ~200msec ~80-90% in triplet --> 5-10 fold dimmer) CLSM: can have a major impact (~5 fold less throughput)
10 Interstate Crossing (ISC) Problem 2: Reactive oxygen ISC ~0.03 4nsec 0.8 emitted fluorescence Excited triplet state Phosphorescence (usec - msec) Triplet state lifetime shortened by oxygen (20msec if none; 0.1 usec if oxygen present Good news: Returns dye to ground state Bad news: Creates reactive oxygen
11 Aside: Phosphor Imager ISC High probability Very slow Excited triplet state Phosphorescence (very slow) Accumulate triplet state (thermally stable) read out with scanning red laser Gives energy for transition to singlet state Emission of light proportional to the stored triplet
12 Issues in fluorescence 1. No dye is perfect < 100,000 photons total (ISC, bleaching) 2. Every emitted photon is sacred (NA 1.25 collects ~20%) (clsm w/ PMT collects 0.02% - 0.3%) 3. Signal/noise limited by number of photons Counting error N ± sqrt(n) Image requires >200 photons/pixel
13 Not enough fluorescence photons? If >200 photons/ pixel needed Microscope records 0.02% Need about 100,000 photons/pixel ~ lifetime of a dye Given dwell-time of laser beam, ISC, collection efficiency Lucky to record 1 photon/dye/scan Every emitted photon is sacred! Maximize throughput (filters, lenses, mirrors) Minimize Bleaching
14 To reduce bleaching: Shorten Triplet lifetime Antibleach Agents: Retinoids, carotinoids, glutathione Vitamin E, N-propyl gallate Eliminate Oxygen (scavenger, bubble N 2 ) No reactive oxygen produced (but lengthens triplet lifetime)
15 Can t get more light by turning up the laser: Dye saturates as I is increased Intense laser beam depletes dye in ground state Pumps more dye into the triplet state (reactive oxygen and silent) Noise doesn t saturate Autofluorescence in cell flavins, NADH, NADPH Raman spectrum of water (488nm in; 584nm out)
16 Optimize light collection, uniformity of illumination High NA, Kohler illumination
17 N.A. and image brightness θ N.A. = η sin θ Transmitted light Brightness = fn (NA 2 / magnification 2 ) 10x 0.5 NA is 3 times brighter than 10x 0.3NA Epifluorescence Brightness = fn (NA 4 / magnification 2 ) 10x 0.5 NA is 8 times brighter than 10x 0.3NA
18 Choose filters well Excitation Dichroic Emission Optimize the light path for collection
19 Emission filter: Selectively detect dye Dichroic Reflector: Bounce exciting λ Pass emitted λ Excitation filter: Selectively excite dye
20 How to separate wavelengths: Interference Filters Basic principle based on reflection from mirror mirror Reflection from higher index --> 180 degree shift (separated for clarity below)
21 Interference Filters Add a layer of intermediate index 3% reflection from glass (higher index --> 180 degree shift (separated for clarity below) Less light passed Constructive interference λ/ Note: thickness of layer in terms of wavelength
22 Interference Filters are wavelength dependent λ 2 = 2 x λ 1 λ 1 Less light passed λ/ Constructive interference λ 2 most light passed λ/4 Destructive interference (antireflection coating) Same thickness is smaller in terms of wavelength for λ 2
23 Dichroic reflector Issues: How steep, How efficient to excite How efficient to collect
24 Emission filter: Selectively detect dye Dichroic Reflector: Bounce exciting λ Pass emitted λ Excitation filter: Selectively excite dye
25 Final Note: Resonance Energy Transfer (non-radiative) The Bad: Self-quenching If dye at high concentration hot-potato the energy until lost
26 Final Note: Resonance Energy Transfer (non-radiative) The Good: FRET as a molecular yardstick Transfer of energy from one dye to another Depends on: Spectral overlap Distance Alignment
27 donor acceptor FRET: Optimize spectral overlap Optimize κ 2 -- alignment of dipoles Minimize direct excitement of the acceptor (extra challenge for filter design)
28 The Finitely Corrected Microscope Compound A B Eyepiece Objective Objective Mount (Flange) 150 mm (tube length = 160mm) In most finitely corrected systems, the eyepiece has to correct for the Lateral Chromatic Aberrations of the objectives, since the intermediate image is not fully corrected. (Note: the LCA correction is done in a brand-specific fashion)
29 Homework 2: Why are most modern microscopes infinity corrected Hint - think of the influence of a piece of glass Image Eyepiece image Eyepiece Lens of eye
30 Take special case: Glass at right angle to second principle ray Simplify by removing eyepiece and eye Image Eyepiece image Eyepiece Lens of eye
31 Take special case: Glass at right angle to second principle ray Zone of Confusion: Rays fail to intersect at only one place Image Eyepiece image Refraction of principle rays
32 Infinity correction provides a region in which an optical flat will not create a zone of confusion Objective Tube lens Image Infinity Domain Eyepiece image Eyepiece Lens of eye
33 Infinity optics creates a domain in which all rays from same point in object are parallel Infinity domain Good Aspects: Optical flats inserted have no effect (shift doesn t matter) Magnification unchanged by adding accessories BUT: Remember that thin lens laws no longer apply
34 Different manufacturers have elected different compromises Length of objective lens Diameter of objective lens Focal length of tube lens Nikon. Leica Zeiss Longer tube lens focal length easier to design, But requires larger diameter threads.
35 Conjugate Planes in Infinity Optics Retina Eye Eyepoint Intermediate Image Eyepiece TubeLens Imaging Path Specimen Objective Objective Back Focal Plane Condenser Condenser Aperture Diaphragm Field Diaphragm Collector Illumination Path Light Source
36 The Abbe Diffraction Experiment: Coherent waves interfering with the specimen produce diffraction patterns Diffraction patterns determine the image How many diffraction orders will be necessary to resolve a specimen structure How this relates to objective aperture How the wavelength of light affects the resolution of an image
37 Why does larger NA give better resolution? Abbe: it is all a problem of diffraction Fourier transform Inverse Fourier transform
38 To make sense of the point spread function, remember that an optical system breaks image down to its underlying spatial components and then reassembles them as an image. Fourier transform Inverse fourier transform i o
39 Fourier transform Inverse fourier transform The image results from the number, position and orientation of the diffracted spots What would happen if blocked some of the spots?
40 Interference of Coherent Waves 1) Different spacing, same wavelength λ Wave Crests λ Direction of wave propagation Source (at Infinity) Solid Arrows show Directions of Constructive Interference
41 Interference of Coherent Waves 2) Same spacing, different wavelength Blue light Red light
42 Imaging a linear grating Intermediate Image: Formed by interfering waves from 1, 0, +1 orders Back Focal Plane: Diffraction pattern, formed by objective (multiple images of the source as a result of line spacing) Specimen: Slide with periodic lines. Spacing determines diffraction angles. Condenser: Produces parallel wave front at 0 (aperture is closed down to a pinhole). Illumination Path
43 Imaging a linear grating Intermediate Image Plane: Beams from the 1, 0, +1 orders interfere with each other. Image of specimen appears (upside-down and side reversed) Objective captures 3 of the 5 diffraction orders. Specimen: Structure causes diffraction; direction of illumination splits up in nondiffracted and diffracted light (5 different angles) Condenser: Illumination angle shown at 0 Imaging Path
44 Widefield imaging: detail in the image from collecting diffracted light Larger aperture = more diffraction peaks = higher resolution Therefore, for any finite aperture: 1. diffraction limit in size of central maximum 2. Extended point spread function Point Spread Function: Image of a infinitely small object.
45 To make sense of the point spread function, remember that an optical system breaks image down to its underlying spatial components and then reassembles them as an image. Fourier transform Inverse fourier transform i o
46 Point Spread Function is three dimensional Image of subdiffraction limit spot Subdiffraction limit spot Thus, each spot in specimen will be blurred onto the sensor (Aperture and Missing Cone )
47 To reduce contribution of the blurring to the image: Deconvolution Compute model of what might have generated the image Image blurred by PSF Compare and iterate Compute how model would be blurred by PSF
48 Image deconvolution Inputs: 3-D image stack 3-D PSF (bead image) Requires: Time Computer memory Note: z-axis blurring from the missing cone is minimized but not eliminated
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