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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Jun 28.
Published in final edited form as: ACS Nano. 2020 Jul 6;14(7):7689–7695. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.0c04374

Figure 3.

Figure 3.

Strategies for universal biomolecule imaging in expansion microscopy (ExM). (A) Click-ExM.38 Schematic of Click-ExM chemistry (top left), where cells metabolically labeled with alkynes are reacted with azide-biotin via click chemistry and stained using streptavidin-dye, then processed with the standard ExM workflow. Example data (right) of phospholipids (top, magenta), sialoglycans (middle, red), and small molecules (bottom, red) of cells treated with alkyne-choline, N-azidoacetylmannosamine (ManNAz), and azide-afatinaib, respectively. Scale bars: 10 μm (top, bottom), 2 μm (top, bottom inset), 50 μm (middle), 5 μm (middle, inset). Reproduced with permission from ref 38. Copyright 2020 Sun et al. (B) Multifunctional linking with trivalent anchoring (TRITON).39 Schematic of the multifunctional probe design (top left) and an example TRITON probe (bottom left) consisting of a fluorescent reporter conjugated with a methacryloyl group and a reactive tetrafluorophenyl (TFP) ester for conjugation with amines such as B-phalloidin (for actin staining) or 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phos-phoethanolamine (DSPE) for lipid labeling. Example data (right) using TRITON probes for imaging cellular phospholipid membranes (pre-expansion top; post-expansion middle) through lipid conjugation to a fluorescent trivalent linker (Pacific Blue, DSPE) and α-tubulin stained via direct grafting of a DNA-conjugated secondary antibody and fluorescent oligo-based readout (post-expansion, bottom). Scale bars: 25 μm (top, middle), 5 μm (zoomed region top), 10 μm (zoomed region middle, bottom) and 5 μm (zoomed region bottom). Reproduced from ref 39. Copyright 2020 American Chemical Society.