Title :
Image Processing and Analysis for Single-Molecule Localization Microscopy: Computation for nanoscale imaging
Author :
Rieger, B. ; Nieuwenhuizen, R. ; Stallinga, S.
Author_Institution :
Imaging Phys., Delft Univ. of Technol., Delft, Netherlands
Abstract :
Fluorescence microscopy is currently the most important tool for visualizing biological structures at the sub?cellular scale. The combination of fluorescence, which enables a high imaging contrast, and the possibility to apply molecular labeling, which allows for a high imaging specificity, makes it a powerful imaging modality. The use of fluorescence microscopy has risen tremendously, in particular since the introduction of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) in the mid-1990s and the possibility to genetically engineer cells to express these proteins. Figure 1 shows the basic layout of a fluorescence microscope. Excitation light of a certain wavelength is reflected via a dichroic beamsplitter and projected onto the specimen via the objective lens of the microscope. The light is absorbed by the fluorescent labels and re-emitted, slightly Stokes-shifted by ?100 nm, at a larger wavelength, typically a few nanoseconds later. The emission light is captured by the objective lens and directed toward the camera via the dichroic beamsplitter.
Keywords :
fluorescence; optical beam splitters; optical microscopy; Stokes-shift; biological structures; camera; dichroic beamsplitter; emission light; excitation light; fluorescence microscopy; green fluorescent protein; image processing; imaging modality; imaging specificity; single-molecule localization microscopy; Beamsplitters; Biomedical imaging; Cameras; Cells (biology); Fluorescence; Image resolution; Lenses; Microscopy; Signal resolution;
Journal_Title :
Signal Processing Magazine, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MSP.2014.2354094