4.8 Article

Magnify is a universal molecular anchoring strategy for expansion microscopy

Journal

NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue 6, Pages 858-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41587-022-01546-1

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Expansion microscopy allows for nanoimaging of biological specimens using conventional microscopes by physically enlarging the specimens embedded in a gel. The Magnify strategy eliminates the need for reactive anchoring chemicals and achieves a high resolution. It has been successfully applied to a wide range of biological specimens, providing insights into various subcellular structures.
Expansion microscopy enables nanoimaging with conventional microscopes by physically and isotropically magnifying preserved biological specimens embedded in a crosslinked water-swellable hydrogel. Current expansion microscopy protocols require prior treatment with reactive anchoring chemicals to link specific labels and biomolecule classes to the gel. We describe a strategy called Magnify, which uses a mechanically sturdy gel that retains nucleic acids, proteins and lipids without the need for a separate anchoring step. Magnify expands biological specimens up to 11 times and facilitates imaging of cells and tissues with effectively around 25-nm resolution using a diffraction-limited objective lens of about 280 nm on conventional optical microscopes or with around 15 nm effective resolution if combined with super-resolution optical fluctuation imaging. We demonstrate Magnify on a broad range of biological specimens, providing insight into nanoscopic subcellular structures, including synaptic proteins from mouse brain, podocyte foot processes in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded human kidney and defects in cilia and basal bodies in drug-treated human lung organoids.

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