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1.IntroductionFluorescence microscopy has a significant impact on cell biology by imaging various cells with visible light, which is noninvasive to biological samples. The classical Abbe diffraction limit in fluorescence microscopy (roughly 200 nm) has been a barrier for quite a long time. Remarkable advances have been made in recent decades in science and technology to break the diffraction limit and obtain the nanoscale resolution. The super-resolution (SR) techniques1 include stimulated emission depletion microscopy,2 structured illumination microscopy (SIM),3–5 single molecule localization-based microscopy,6–8 and so forth, paving the way for significant progress in biological research. Among them, SIM doubles the resolution of conventional microscopes by exciting fluorescence with spatially patterned light and collects the down-modulated frequency information that is not accessible in conventional microscopes. It is superior to other SR techniques in terms of speed and suitability for live samples and is a widefield nonscanning technique, requiring only several images to reconstruct a high-resolution image, without high and harmful illumination intensities.9 As the SIM concept was proposed, a couple of system types have been established,10–16 and some notable achievements like three-dimensional (3-D) SR live cell imaging have been made in the biological application. For all the interference-based SIM systems, it is necessary to produce two (two-dimensional SIM)/three beams (3-D SIM) that are focused on the rear focal plane of the objective lens, which can then be collimated through the objective lens and produce interference fringes at the intersection. To achieve this, typical commercial SIM systems (Nikon N-SIM & Zessi Elyra-SIM) using a transmission phase grating produce the sinusoidal pattern, translating by a piezoelectric actuator, and rotating by a mechanical stage.10 Obviously, the mechanical movement of the grating requires precise servo system cooperation and limits the acquisition speed to several seconds. To solve this problem, a phase-only spatial light modulator (SLM)11 is employed to produce and translate the one-dimensional (1-D) interference patterns instead of the physical grating. This scheme has the advantages of allowing one to tune the illumination parameters over a broad range, eliminating the mechanical movement, and so on. But due to the limited refreshing speed of SLM (40 to 60 Hz, typically), the frame rate of SIM is still well below the requirements of live cell imaging. Benefiting from the development of SLM, the ferroelectric liquid crystal on silicon (FLCOS) with a high refreshing rate () was invented and applied. Then with a carefully designed polarization rotator to keep the -polarization that is the key point to obtain high-contrast fringes, SIM finally achieves a video frame rate and enables one to image live biological samples with high quality.12–16 But, high-power lasers are needed for the FLCOS-based SIM because of the low diffraction efficiency of FLCOS (, typically), and due to the finite and discrete duty cycles of the grating loaded on the SLM, the choice of the pattern has to satisfy some constraints. Usually, such optical scheme requires a relatively complex pattern setting of the grating (such as shearing the grating to change the grating vector, combine the vertically interleaving and horizontal patterns together, and so forth11,14,15) on the SLM to achieve near-identical line spacings at different illumination orientations and equispaced phase shift, which is particularly important in total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) SIM. In many cases, observing and comparing the sample at different TIR angle plays an important role in biological research because the different penetration depths will bring different features of the tissues,17 and SLM-based SIM is not very convenient to change the illumination angle continuously to satisfy this requirement. Furthermore, the modulation depth of the patterns plays an important role in SIM, and the -polarized incident lights at the rear focus plane are preferred.18 Thus, the digital micromirror device based SIM19 that utilizes the incoherent pattern is not suitable for high-NA objective lens, and the off-axis-Michelson-interferometer-type SIM in Ref. 13 using circular polarization to produce the patterns sacrifices the modulation depth and the quality of the SR image, in spite of overcoming the disadvantages of SLM by a piezo-driven tip-tilt mirror. In this article, we provide an alternative approach to realize high modulation depth patterns (-polarization interference) SIM system using galvo mirrors, piezo-platform, and polarization converter. It can arbitrarily increase the angle of incidence of the illumination light up to the TIR and shifting the phase of pattern at a very high speed (depends on the speed of response of the galvo mirror), making it easier to switch between widefield & TIRF-SIM, offering more convenience in adapting the penetration depth of the biological tissues. 2.Optical SetupAs shown in Fig. 1(a), the SIM imaging system was built based on a Nikon Ti-series microscope. The polarized excitation laser beam (shown as green) was coupled into the polarization maintaining single-mode fiber (Oz Optics, core size , NA 0.11) and collimated by the beam collimator (CL, Thorlabs, ZC618FC). The incident beam can be separated into two beams with the same intensity by the polarizing beam splitter (PBS, Thorlabs, CCM1-PBS251/M) via rotating the half-wave plate (HWP1, Thorlabs, AQWP05M-600). Though the mirrors (M1, M2, M3, and M4), the beams are reflected into the corresponding scanning unit. The M2 is placed on the 1-D manual adjustable table [not shown in Fig. 1(a)] to adjust the optical path difference between the two-path beams to keep them in the coherence length. There are two groups of completely symmetric scanning units in the system—the orange area is shown in Fig. 1(a). Each scanning unit consists of two scanning galvo mirrors (SMX, SMY, Cambridge Technology, CTI 8310k) and two spherical mirrors (SM1 and SM2). The focal lengths of SM1 and SM2 are 100 and 50 mm, respectively. The galvo mirrors and spherical reflectors form a 4f system, in which SM1 and SM2 are used to project the illumination spot to the position of the rotation axes of the SMY and keep the spot fixed (fixed point) at the center of SMY while the SMX rotates. The chief ray of each beam is parallel to the optical axis again through the scanning lens (SL, Thorlabs, SL50-CLS2). The half-wave plate (HWP2, Thorlabs, AQWP05M-600) before the scanning unit 2 is applied to keep the polarization direction of the two beams consistent. The 4f scanning unit setup using two spherical mirrors (SM1 and SM2) can avoid the problem of noncoplanar line optical path in a refraction-type 4f scanning system, and meanwhile can keep its advantages, like keeping the fixed point at the last scanning mirror and flat and wide scanning range, and so on. The polarization of the illumination beams plays an important role in the generation of a fine interference pattern, especially in the TIRF-SIM system whose modulation frequency is sufficiently high. Hence, we introduce the polarization converter (PR, Thorlabs, WPV10L) at the conjugated pupil plane right behind the beam splitter (BS, Thorlabs, CCM1-BS013) to generate the -polarized beam on the sample plane. Figure 1(b) shows the basic principle of how the PR rotates the polarization of linearly polarized input beam into -polarization at the pupil plane. The small red circle represents the cross section of the beam and the large green circle represents the entrance pupil of the PR, which size is the same as the outer size of the PR. From left to the right, the black arrow represents the polarization direction of the incident beam, the fast axis of the PR, and the polarization direction of the outgoing beam. Through adapting the center of PR to coincide with the optical axis of the system and rotating the fast axis of PR to a proper direction, all parts of each focused beam will be simultaneously converted to -polarization. The note is that the PR is a vortex phase plate when the incident light is parallel and is distributed symmetrically around the center of PR. But, if the incident beam is focused as a point on the PR, then, all the polarization of the beam will be converted to the corresponding direction depending on the focused position and the fast axis of the PR, by adapting the center of the PR to coincide with the optical axis of the system and rotating the fast axis to a proper direction, the -polarization will be achieved very easily without any time lapse than the PR combined with liquid crystal and one-fourth wave plate and much cheaper than the PR combined with Pockels cell. After PR, the desired two beams are refocused to the centrosymmetric points near the edges of the pupil plane of the microscope objective ( TIRF, Nikon) by two-tube lenses (L1, L2, Thorlabs, TTL200-A, ). Each beam is recollimated by the objective lens and hit the cover slip surface at a tilt angle . Through the tip/tilt of SMX and SMY in each scan unit, will be changed continuously. When is less than the critical angle, the widefield-SIM mode works, else the evanescent waves from the two beams extend into the specimen and interfere to make the TIRF-SIM mode work. The phase shift of the illumination pattern is realized by M2, which is fixed on a 1-D piezo-platform (PI, P-753). The emission light (shown as yellow) from the specimen is collected by the electron multiplying charge coupled device (EMCCD, Andor, iXon Ultra 888) after the dichroic mirror (DM, Chroma, C174298) as in a conventional fluorescence microscope. The galvo mirrors and the piezo-platform are chosen due to their high-speed kHz rate angle tuning capability, which made our system have the capacity to change the orientation and phase of the illumination pattern very quickly, and meanwhile have the potential to achieve SR imaging at very high frame rate. The modulation depth of the pattern is controlled by adjusting the polarization direction of the incident beam existing from the scanning units and the fast axis of PR, and let them fit in the relationship of Fig. 1(b). Unlike the SIM system mentioned above, this setup can realize -polarization at arbitrary orientation without mechanical movement that will be beneficial for future use, like further improving the spectrum integrity by illuminating in five or more orientations and applying pattern-illuminated Fourier ptychography algorithm’s in SIM and so on. For the aligning and calibrating the instrument, there are already some related literatures that describe similar works.20,21 Here, we chose to record a series of images of the BFP of the objective at different azimuthal angles to finish the alignment and calibration, while the position of laser spot in the image series is the function of according to the Descartes’ laws. To achieve this, we first removed the eyepiece of Nikon Ti1 and replaced it with a C-mount camera combined with a convex lens, then placed the sample of a monolayer of fluorescent particles (F8830) fixed on the glass/water interface. The experimental results and the calibrating curve for the voltage and are shown in Fig. 2, from Figs. 2(a)–2(d), the was increasing linearly with the voltage, achieved the critical angle at Fig. 2(c) and the TIRF angle at Fig. 2(d). The note is that we can observe the appearance of reflected light spots when TIRF occurs, which is more accurate for TIRF angle calibrating than measuring the spots position on the laboratory roof. Furthermore, for our TIRF-SIM system, the initial alignment is that we only need to adjust the two lights to exit from the center of the BFP, as the status shown in Fig. 2(a), then the symmetry can be guaranteed by the galvanometer with proper voltage, and the interference will happen sequentially. In addition, the asymmetry of the system for different azimuthal angles also can be compensated by adjusting the voltages of the galvanometers. 3.Reconstitution Algorithm and ProcedureAssuming that the three-step phase shifting strategy is applied, the image processing of SIM can be expressed by the following equation: where denotes the corresponding Fourier transform, denotes the data of ’th caption, is the modulation depth, is the phase of the ’th pattern, is the modulation wavevector, is the fluorescence distribution, and is the point spread function, respectively.To obtain a high-fidelity image with enhanced resolution, the phases and the modulation wavevector should be determined first. As for TIRF-SIM, the modulation frequency is usually close to or larger than the cutoff frequency of the detection optical transfer function (OTF). Hence, the peak searching scheme for the parameters’ estimation is not suitable here. We apply the cross-correlation method for the estimation of the phase and the wavevector. As demonstrated in Ref. 22, we can estimate the modulation wavevector from the following correlation result: where denotes the cross-correlation operation and stands for the Fourier domain. A local maximum will appear when in Eq. (2) and hence the modulation wavevector can be estimated. Here, we assume the separation between every two phases is , thus the relation between the separated components and is given byThus, the initial phase can be also estimated via the correlation result. We can reconstruct the SIM result according to the parameters estimated above. Figure 3 shows a typical procedure of acquiring and processing in SIM. Once a set of the modulation parameters (such as the modulation frequency and pattern orientations) is chosen, the electrical field at the Fourier plane is determined. Different voltages will thus be applied onto the galvo to generate the desired illumination pattern. The reconstruction parameters of a set of images are estimated via cross correlation of the predemodulated components, as described in Eq. (3). The different frequency bands of the sample are then shifted to their correct position, through which the frequency support of the reconstructed image is extended. 4.Experimental ResultsTo demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed system, we have conducted the following experiments, as shown in Figs. 4Fig. 5–6. First, we imaged the 100-nm yellow–green (excitation wavelength: 505 nm/emission wavelength: 515 nm) fluorescent beads (F8803, Life Technologies) under TIRF-SIM mode, with an EMCCD exposure time of 50 ms per image. The results in Fig. 4 show that the reconstructed image by our system yields clearly distinct beads. This can be found quantitatively from the cross-section plots, given for four close-by beads (indistinguishable in widefield) in Fig. 4(c). The full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) of a single 100-nm diameter fluorescent bead decreases from 230 to 117 nm, yielding an approximately twofold resolution improvement. This agrees well with the theoretical enhancement factor, estimated based on the TIR wave vector and the numerical aperture of the detection objective ().16,23 The tissue (Abberior STAR 635P, excitation wavelength: wavelength: 651 nm) results are shown in Fig. 5. The proposed system produces a striking resolution improvement over deconvolved conventional TIRF image. The FWHM of isolated microtubules reaches 105 nm in the TIRF-SIM reconstruction, and Fig. 5(c) shows a typical cross-section profile of the data. Then, we demonstrated the capability of our system of changing the illumination angle as well as the pattern orientation and thus making the system work at widefield/TIRF-SIM mode continuously and conveniently. From Figs. 6(a)–6(c), the gradually increases and exceeds the critical angle () in Fig. 6(d). The corresponding FWHMs of the PSFs are shown in Fig. 6(f), which agrees well with the theoretical enhancement of SIM. When the is small, the frequency components are just a little bit above the system’s OTF (dashed yellow circle in Fig. 6), and as increases, the frequency components also gradually increase. Note that the illumination conditions of Figs. 6(b) and 6(c) are typical widefield and TIRF-SIM, respectively. Figures 6(c)–6(e) show the capability of the multiorientation pattern illumination using our system at the same , and the orientations are 3, 5, and 20 with equiangular interval, respectively. Figures 6(g) and 6(h) show the reconstructed results of beads under the conditions shown in Figs. 6(c) and 6(e), respectively. Comparing these results, we can see that the more complete the spectrum is, the more rounded the particles are. Therefore, adding more illumination orientation appropriately will reduce the artifacts in SIM reconstruction, although more illuminating directions increase the raw data number and decrease the SR imaging speed, it can improve the reconstructed SR image quality and bring less artifacts, which is very important when doing the biological tissue analysis.24,25 The system also has some optical sectioning capacity, as shown in Fig. 7. The SR images were obtained at different incident angles (a) to 67 deg. Because of the different penetration depths of the evanescent waves at different incident angles, different parts of the sample were illuminated and excited. As what is shown in the images of the boxed regions (green), the intensity of three parts of the microtubules became weaker as the illumination angle increases, and disappeared at . This is consistent with the theory of evanescent wave propagation, that is, when the illumination angle is small, the penetration depth is large, and the signal-to-noise (SNR) is better, when the illumination angle is large, the penetration depth decreases, resulting in the SNR of the sample farther from the cover glass surface decreases until it disappears. Two parts of the microtubules (marked with the purple oval) are more visible at , whereas it is not very clear at the and 64 deg; this might be due to a decrease in the SNR of the surrounding image, and these two areas themselves are relatively close to the cover glass. This function will be very helpful if someone wants to use this system for axis SR reconstruction to get 3-D SR information.26 In addition, when using this system for imaging biological samples, proper adjustment of the illumination angle will be helpful for clear observation of local details or selectively block out some local information that you do not want to see. Moreover, as shown in Fig. 8, the prototype also has the capability for live cell imaging, which is demonstrated by imaging microtubules in live human bone osteosarcoma epithelial cells (U2OS) labeled with SiR-tubulin (excitation wavelength: wavelength: 660 nm). Considering reducing the phototoxicity for long-term exposure, live-cell image series were recorded at 50-ms exposure time per raw image corresponding to a 450-ms SIM frame time, and the nominal illumination intensity for this dataset was . We can see the swing phenomenon of the microtubules. It is worth noting that the only limitation of the imaging speed in the proposed system is the fluorescent luminescence efficiency and the performance of the camera theoretically, here, means a temporal resolution of SR images per second. In fact, however, for live cell imaging, we should consider the fluorescent brightness, phototoxicity, photobleaching, and the SNR of the image as a whole. There is always a compromise between the imaging speed and the imaging quality. 5.ConclusionWe construct and demonstrate a prototype for widefield and TIRF-SIM with scanning galvo mirrors and polarization converter, which can change the illumination directions and angles continuously and conveniently and keep the -polarization interference anytime, offering more flexibility than previous systems. The experimental results proved that a twofold resolution improvement and the live cell imaging capability are achieved by the system. 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BiographyYouhua Chen received his BS degree in physics from the Yangzhou University in 2007 and PhD in optical engineering at the Northern University of China in 2013. He is a postdoctor in optical engineering at Zhejiang University and an associate professor at North University of China. He is interested in research work on fluorescence super-resolution microscopy, and mainly takes part in the research work on structure illumination microscopy and its application in biomedicine. Ruizhi Cao is currently an undergraduate student of College of Optical Science and Engineering, Zhejiang University. He mainly focuses on developing new fluorescence imaging methods and image reconstruction algorithms at present. Wenjie Liu is currently a doctoral student at Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, under the supervision of Dr. Cuifang Kuang. His research interests are the development of novel super-resolution imaging techniques including total internal reflection microscopy, structured illumination microscopy and 3-D fluorescence emission difference microscopy. Dazhao Zhu received his master’s degree in Optoelectronic Engineering Department of Changchun University of Science and Technology. Currently, he is a doctoral student at Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, under the supervision of Dr. Cuifang Kuang. His current research focuses on super-resolution imaging based on fluorescence emission difference microscopy. Zhiming Zhang is currently a doctoral student at Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, under the supervision of Dr. Cuifang Kuang. His current research interests are the development of super-resolution imaging techniques including optical fluctuation imaging, array scan imaging, and structured illumination microscopy. Cuifang Kuang received his PhD from Beijing Jiaotong University in 2007. Currently, he is a professor at Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China. He recently focuses on optical super-resolution imaging techniques. He authored more than 80 journal publications, including physical reviews letter, light: science & applications, optica, scientific reports, optics letter and optics express, and so on, 60 patents, 2 book chapters. Xu Liu is a professor at Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China. He focuses on optical films coatings and coating techniques; optical meta-surface, micro- and nanostructured devices; real 3-D display, projection display, AR/VR display, and 3-D interaction techniques; optical super-resolution imaging, computation imaging, bioimaging, and detection; and free-form optics for illumination and for imaging. He is coauthor of over 300 publications. |