posted on 2021-11-04, 15:42authored byRu̅ta Gerasimaitė, Jonas Bucevičius, Kamila A. Kiszka, Sebastian Schnorrenberg, Georgij Kostiuk, Tanja Koenen, Gražvydas Lukinavičius
Here we report a
small molecule tubulin probe for single-molecule
localization microscopy (SMLM), stimulated emission depletion (STED)
microscopy and MINFLUX nanoscopy, which can be used in living and
fixed cells. We explored a series of taxane derivatives containing
spontaneously blinking far-red dye hydroxymethyl silicon–rhodamine
(HMSiR) and found that the linker length profoundly affects the probe
permeability and off-targeting in living cells. The best performing
probe, HMSiR-tubulin, is composed of cabazitaxel and the 6′-regioisomer
of HMSiR bridged by a C6 linker. Microtubule diameter of ≤50
nm was routinely measured in SMLM experiments on living and fixed
cells. HMSiR-tubulin allows a complementary use of different nanoscopy
techniques for investigating microtubule functions and developing
imaging methods. For the first time, we resolved the inner microtubule
diameter of 16 ± 5 nm by optical nanoscopy and thereby demonstrated
the utility of a self-blinking dye for MINFLUX imaging.