- Huang, Fang;
- Sirinakis, George;
- Allgeyer, Edward S;
- Schroeder, Lena K;
- Duim, Whitney C;
- Kromann, Emil B;
- Phan, Thomy;
- Rivera-Molina, Felix E;
- Myers, Jordan R;
- Irnov, Irnov;
- Lessard, Mark;
- Zhang, Yongdeng;
- Handel, Mary Ann;
- Jacobs-Wagner, Christine;
- Lusk, C Patrick;
- Rothman, James E;
- Toomre, Derek;
- Booth, Martin J;
- Bewersdorf, Joerg
Fluorescence nanoscopy, or super-resolution microscopy, has become an important tool in cell biological research. However, because of its usually inferior resolution in the depth direction (50-80 nm) and rapidly deteriorating resolution in thick samples, its practical biological application has been effectively limited to two dimensions and thin samples. Here, we present the development of whole-cell 4Pi single-molecule switching nanoscopy (W-4PiSMSN), an optical nanoscope that allows imaging of three-dimensional (3D) structures at 10- to 20-nm resolution throughout entire mammalian cells. We demonstrate the wide applicability of W-4PiSMSN across diverse research fields by imaging complex molecular architectures ranging from bacteriophages to nuclear pores, cilia, and synaptonemal complexes in large 3D cellular volumes.