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Probing single molecules in single living cells
- Source :
- Analytical chemistry. 72(22)
- Publication Year :
- 2000
-
Abstract
- Direct observation of single molecules and single molecular events inside living cells could dramatically improve our understanding of basic cellular processes (e.g., signal transduction and gene transcription) as well as improving our knowledge on the intracellular transport and fate of therapeutic agents (e.g., antisense RNA and gene therapy vectors). However, a key remaining question is whether single-molecule methodologies could be developed to study complex molecular processes in living cells. in contrast to clean and well-controlled conditions in-vitro, the intracellular environment contains a broad collection of biological macromolecules and fluorescent materials such as porphyrins and flavins. This complex environment is known to produce intense background fluorescence, commonly known as autofluorescence. Thus, a major concern is that this intracellular background could overwhelm the relatively weak signals arising from single molecules.We demonstrate that fluorescence detection of single molecules can be achieved by tightly focusing a laser beam into a living cell (see Figure 1). The observed background fluorescence is indeed higher than that in-vitro (e.g., pure biological buffer), but this background is continuous and stable, and does not significantly interfere with the measurement of single-molecule photon bursts. Specifically, we report single-molecule results on three types of extrinsic fluorescent molecules in cultured human HeLa cells (a cervical cancer cell line).
- Subjects :
- Confocal
Analytical chemistry
Vectors in gene therapy
Endocytosis
Analytical Chemistry
law.invention
Rhodamine 6G
HeLa
chemistry.chemical_compound
Confocal microscopy
law
Fluorescence microscope
Humans
Instrumentation
chemistry.chemical_classification
Microscopy, Confocal
biology
Chemistry
biology.organism_classification
Fluorescence
Antisense RNA
Autofluorescence
Microscopy, Fluorescence
Cytoplasm
Transferrin
Molecular Probes
Biophysics
Signal transduction
Intracellular
Macromolecule
HeLa Cells
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00032700
- Volume :
- 72
- Issue :
- 22
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Analytical chemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....41685b4f40307bf319f0cfaf8b1e9613