Shane van Breda |
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To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy ***** Dear members, I was wondering what you guys might suggest is a better antibody conjugate to use for confocal microscopy? DyLight or Alexa Fluor? Them seem very similar, so do I choose either of them? Thanks, Shane. |
George McNamara |
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To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy ***** Hi Shane, Probably going to be more (secondary) antibody and lot dependent (and possibly company), rather than fluorophore per se. Either will be far superior to fluorescein if the pH of the mounting medium is less than ~7.5. Leica's STED preparation guide recommends DyLight 488 over Alexa Fluor 488. At a Leica CW-STED demo I brought user slides to, we obtained excellent super-resolution results with several lab's Alexa Fluor 488 conjugated secondary antibody slides. We also had several Alexa Fluor 488 slides that had no resolution advantage to confocal only, and one DyLight 488 slide with no advantage - I believe (but cannot prove with limited specimens) that "no improvement" specimens were refractive index mismatch, specimen distance from coverglass, or mounting media not being perfect (seer Kasper .. Hell 2010 Small for what an optimized ROXS mounting medium can do for STED). We also obtained excellent results with a CYTOO-prepared micropatterned coverslip that had fluorescein-phalloidin and amazing super-resolution GFP-fusion protein live /E coli/ cells: EGFP did not photobleach at all, even with prolonged 488 excitation and full power, ~~2 W (at laser) 594 depletion illumination! Alexa Fluor 488 and fluorescein photobleached fairly quickly in STED mode on most of the specimens, and various red fluorphores bleached impressively well with the 592 nm depletion beam on. I am extremely interested in whether researchers have found Leica's Ti:Sapphire depletion STED to be more useful than 592 nm CW-STED - any experiences on the listserv or privately are welcome! Sincerely, George p.s. With respect to Cytoo, see Schauer et al 2010 Nature Methods: Schauer K, Duong T, Bleakley K, Bardin S, Bornens M, Goud B. Probabilistic density maps to study global endomembrane organization. </pubmed/20512144> Nat Methods. 2010 Jul;7(7):560-6. Epub 2010 May 30.PMID: 20512144 With respect to indirect immunofluorescence, Richard Burry recently a book - Immunocytochemistry - in which he showed that more washes (7+) after each antibody incubation is better than fewer. Also critical to make sure the cells/tissue do not have a chance to dry out during any step. That is, if processing several slides in parallel, remove and immediately replace wash solution from one coverglass, rather than remove from all ten then add sequentially. My thanks to Leica, Charles Hemphill (Southeast USA Leica confocal/STED sales) and Max Planck Florida Institute for enabling me to get time on the CW-STED nanoscope. On 12/11/2010 9:55 AM, Shane van Breda wrote: > ***** > To join, leave or search the confocal microscopy listserv, go to: > http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=confocalmicroscopy > ***** > > Dear members, > > I was wondering what you guys might suggest is a better antibody conjugate > to use for confocal microscopy? > > DyLight or Alexa Fluor? > > Them seem very similar, so do I choose either of them? > > Thanks, > > Shane. > > |
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