Commercial super-resolution (SR) imaging systems require a high budget, while current more affordable open source microscopy systems lack modularity and sometimes are too complex or lack reliability. We present miEye - a cost-effective microscope designed for high-resolution wide-field fluorescence imaging. The build is constructed using a CNC milled aluminum microscope body and commercially available optomechanics, with open-source Python-based microscope control, data visualization, and analysis software integration. The data acquisition software works robustly with commonly used industrial-grade complementary metal oxide semiconductor (iCMOS) cameras, performs IR beam back-reflection-based automatic focus stabilization, and allows for laser control via an Arduino-based laser relay. The open-source nature of the design is aimed to facilitate adaptation by the community. The build can be constructed for a cost of roughly 50 k €. It contains SM-fiber and MM-fiber excitation paths that are easy to interchange and an adaptable emission path. Also, it ensures <5 nm/min stability of the sample on all axes, and allows achieving <30 nm lateral resolution for dSTORM and DNA-PAINT single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) experiments. Thus it serves as a cost-effective and adaptable addition to the open source microscopy community and potentially will allow high-quality SR imaging even for limited-budget research groups.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9556790 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ohx.2022.e00368 | DOI Listing |
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