AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on improving superresolution imaging methods for tracking multiple molecules at the nanoscale without being hindered by diffraction limits, which is crucial for understanding dynamic processes in biology.
  • These new techniques leverage the correlations in widefield imaging data, allowing researchers to accurately track and count emitters, even when they are very close together (≈50nm).
  • A novel Bayesian nonparametric approach is introduced, which simultaneously assesses emitter counts and their movement tracks while quantifying uncertainties from various sources, making it effective even in crowded conditions where traditional methods fail.

Article Abstract

Assessing dynamic processes at single molecule scales is key toward capturing life at the level of its molecular actors. Widefield superresolution methods, such as STORM, PALM, and PAINT, provide nanoscale localization accuracy, even when distances between fluorescently labeled single molecules ("emitters") fall below light's diffraction limit. However, as these superresolution methods rely on rare photophysical events to distinguish emitters from both each other and background, they are largely limited to static samples. In contrast, here we leverage spatiotemporal correlations of dynamic widefield imaging data to extend superresolution to simultaneous multiple emitter tracking without relying on photodynamics even as emitter distances from one another fall below the diffraction limit. We simultaneously determine emitter numbers and their tracks (localization and linking) with the same localization accuracy per frame as widefield superresolution does for immobilized emitters under similar imaging conditions (≈50nm). We demonstrate our results for both data and, for benchmarking purposes, on synthetic data. To this end, we avoid the existing tracking paradigm relying on completely or partially separating the tasks of emitter number determination, localization of each emitter, and linking emitter positions across frames. Instead, we develop a fully joint posterior distribution over the quantities of interest, including emitter tracks and their total, otherwise unknown, number within the Bayesian nonparametric paradigm. Our posterior quantifies the full uncertainty over emitter numbers and their associated tracks propagated from origins including shot noise and camera artefacts, pixelation, stochastic background, and out-of-focus motion. Finally, it remains accurate in more crowded regimes where alternative tracking tools cannot be applied.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10104004PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.03.535459DOI Listing

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