Authors
K-F Giebel, Clemens Bechinger, Stephan Herminghaus, M Riedel, Paul Leiderer, Ulrich Weiland, Martin Bastmeyer
Publication date
1999/1/31
Journal
Biophysical Journal
Volume
76
Issue
1
Pages
509-516
Publisher
Cell Press
Description
We have developed a new method for observing cell/substrate contacts of living cells in culture based on the optical excitation of surface plasmons. Surface plasmons are quanta of an electromagnetic wave that travel along the interface between a metal and a dielectric layer. The evanescent field associated with this excitation decays exponentially perpendicular to the interface, on the order of some hundreds of nanometers. Cells were cultured on an aluminum-coated glass prism and illuminated from below with a laser beam. Because the cells interfere with the evanescent field, the intensity of the reflected light, which is projected onto a camera chip, correlates with the cell/substrate distance. Contacts between the cell membrane and the substrate can thus be visualized at high contrast with a vertical resolution in the nanometer range. The lateral resolution along the propagation direction of surface plasmons is …
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