This 3-D view of a mouse cell’s DNA-containing nucleus was taken
using a modified light microscope. Researchers stained the cell with normal
fluorescent dyes and mounted it on a standard microscope slide. To capture this
unprecedented image, the scientists illuminated the cell with three
intersecting beams of light and processed the resulting image with a computer.
While other 3-D microscopy techniques exist, the new method, called
3-dimensional structured illumination microscopy (3D-SIM), is the first to
combine a 3-D view, multiple colors and a resolution of 100 nanometers — twice
that of the best conventional light microscopes, the team reports in the June 6
Science. “You can do this 3-D reconstruction with any confocal
[light] microscope,” notes research team member Heinrich Leonhardt, a
geneticist at LudwigMaximiliansUniversity
in Munich, Germany. In the image, red
indicates the bundled up DNA inside the nucleus and green shows the nuclear
membrane.