Expansion Microscopy: Enabling Single Cell Analysis In Intact Biological Systems

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Alon, S.*, Huynh, G. H.*, Boyden, E. S. (2018) Expansion Microscopy: Enabling Single Cell Analysis In Intact Biological Systems, The FEBS Journal 286(8):1482-1494. (*, co-first authors)

There is a need for single cell analysis methods that enable the identification and localization of different kinds of biomolecule throughout cells and throughout intact tissues, thereby allowing characterization and classification of individual cells and their relationships to each other within intact systems. Expansion microscopy (ExM) is a technology that physically magnifies tissues in an isotropic way, thereby achieving super‐resolution microscopy on diffraction‐limited microscopes, enabling rapid image acquisition and large field of view. As a result, ExM is well‐positioned to integrate molecular content and cellular morphology, with the spatial precision sufficient to resolve individual biological building blocks, with the scale and accessibility required to deploy over extended 3‐D objects like tissues and organs.

Resources associated with this Publication:
[Expansion microscopy: physical magnification with nanoscale precision]