Accedi

Total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy or TIRF is an advanced microscopic technique used to visualize fluorophores in samples close to a solid surface with a higher refractive index, such as a glass coverslip. TIRF only allows fluorophores in proximity to the solid surface to be excited. When light from a medium with a lower refractive index (such as air) hits the glass coverslip at a critical angle, the light undergoes total internal reflection stead of passing through the glass. This happens as the sample has a lower refractive index than the coverslip and does not allow the light to enter within. The light is reflected from the interface and forms an electromagnetic field emitting short-length evanescent waves. These waves only excite the fluorophore near the surface as they can move only about 100 to 200 nm deep within the cell before dying out.

There are two types of TIRF; prism-based and objective-based. In prism-based TIRF microscopy, a prism is placed on the coverslip surface that directs the evanescent wave to the sample. In objective-based TIRF microscopy, there is no prism at the interphase; the objective is the same as the light source that helps create the evanescent wave.

TIRF has several advantages over traditional fluorescence and confocal microscopes; it prevents the illumination of background fluorophores. It helps in studying the structures close to the cell surface. It reduces the blurring effect and does not allow out-of-focus light to interfere with the image. As the samples are not directly exposed to an intense light beam, the photobleaching is minimum, and the cells are less exposed to phototoxicity.

Tags
Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence MicroscopyTIRFFluorophoresRefractive IndexCritical AngleTotal Internal ReflectionGlass CoverslipEvanescent WavesPrism based TIRFObjective based TIRFBackground FluorescenceCell Surface ImagingPhotobleachingPhototoxicity

Dal capitolo 33:

article

Now Playing

33.8 : Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence Microscopy

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

5.5K Visualizzazioni

article

33.1 : Imaging di campioni biologici con microscopia ottica

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

4.5K Visualizzazioni

article

33.2 : Microscopia a contrasto di fase e a contrasto interferenziale differenziale

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

7.2K Visualizzazioni

article

33.3 : Fissazione e sezionamento

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

4.0K Visualizzazioni

article

33.4 : Microscopia a immunofluorescenza

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

9.5K Visualizzazioni

article

33.5 : Immunocitochimica e Immunoistochimica

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

9.9K Visualizzazioni

article

33.6 : Microscopia a fluorescenza confocale

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

12.5K Visualizzazioni

article

33.7 : Dinamica delle proteine nelle cellule viventi

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

2.0K Visualizzazioni

article

33.9 : Microscopia a forza atomica

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

3.3K Visualizzazioni

article

33.10 : Microscopia a fluorescenza a super-risoluzione

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

6.7K Visualizzazioni

article

33.11 : Panoramica sulla microscopia elettronica

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

8.2K Visualizzazioni

article

33.12 : Microscopia elettronica a scansione

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

4.0K Visualizzazioni

article

33.13 : Microscopia elettronica a trasmissione

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

5.2K Visualizzazioni

article

33.14 : Preparazione di campioni per microscopia elettronica

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

5.2K Visualizzazioni

article

33.15 : Microscopia elettronica Immunogold

Visualizing Cells, Tissues, and Molecules

3.8K Visualizzazioni

See More

JoVE Logo

Riservatezza

Condizioni di utilizzo

Politiche

Ricerca

Didattica

CHI SIAMO

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tutti i diritti riservati