Recent advances in the design and measurement capabilities of optical tweezers instruments, and especially the combination with multi-color fluorescence detection, have accommodated a dramatic increase in the versatility of optical trapping. Quadruple (Q)-trap optical tweezers are an excellent example of such an advance, by providing three-dimensional control over two constructs and thereby enabling for example DNA-DNA braiding. However, the implementation of fluorescence detection in such a Q-trapping system poses several challenges: (1) since typical samples span a distance in the order of tens of micrometers, it requires imaging of a large field of view, (2) in order to capture fast molecular dynamics, fast imaging with single-molecule sensitivity is desired, (3) in order to study three-dimensional objects, it could be needed to detect emission light at different axial heights while keeping the objective lens and thus the optically trapped microspheres in a fixed position. In this chapter, we describe design guidelines for a fluorescence imaging module on a Q-trap system that overcomes these challenges and provide a step-by-step description for construction and alignment of such a system. Finally, we present detailed instructions for proof-of-concept experiments that can be used to validate and highlight the capabilities of the instruments.

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