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Optical magnetic imaging of living cells

Abstract

Magnetic imaging is a powerful tool for probing biological and physical systems. However, existing techniques either have poor spatial resolution compared to optical microscopy and are hence not generally applicable to imaging of sub-cellular structure (for example, magnetic resonance imaging1), or entail operating conditions that preclude application to living biological samples while providing submicrometre resolution (for example, scanning superconducting quantum interference device microscopy2, electron holography3 and magnetic resonance force microscopy4). Here we demonstrate magnetic imaging of living cells (magnetotactic bacteria) under ambient laboratory conditions and with sub-cellular spatial resolution (400 nanometres), using an optically detected magnetic field imaging array consisting of a nanometre-scale layer of nitrogen–vacancy colour centres implanted at the surface of a diamond chip. With the bacteria placed on the diamond surface, we optically probe the nitrogen–vacancy quantum spin states and rapidly reconstruct images of the vector components of the magnetic field created by chains of magnetic nanoparticles (magnetosomes) produced in the bacteria. We also spatially correlate these magnetic field maps with optical images acquired in the same apparatus. Wide-field microscopy allows parallel optical and magnetic imaging of multiple cells in a population with submicrometre resolution and a field of view in excess of 100 micrometres. Scanning electron microscope images of the bacteria confirm that the correlated optical and magnetic images can be used to locate and characterize the magnetosomes in each bacterium. Our results provide a new capability for imaging bio-magnetic structures in living cells under ambient conditions with high spatial resolution, and will enable the mapping of a wide range of magnetic signals within cells and cellular networks5,6.

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Figure 1: Wide-field magnetic imaging microscope.
Figure 2: Wide-field optical and magnetic images of magnetotactic bacteria.
Figure 3: Determining magnetic moments of individual bacteria from measured magnetic field distributions.
Figure 4: Localization of magnetic nanoparticle chains using magnetic field measurements.

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Acknowledgements

We thank L. Qian for discussions about related experiments using a scanning SQUID microscope in the laboratory of K. A. Moler, J. W. Lichtman and R. Schalek for access to the SEM, S. G. Turney for access to the water-immersion objective and advice regarding cell immobilization, and P. R. Hemmer and H. Park for technical discussions. A.K. was supported by a David and Lucille Packard Foundation Fellowship in Science and Engineering and by the National Institutes of Health (R01GM084122). This work was supported by the NSF and the DARPA QuASAR programme.

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Contributions

D.L. and R.L.W. conceived the idea of the study. K.A. developed modelling and fitting algorithms to interpret the data. D.L., K.A., D.R.G., S.J.D. and L.M.P. performed magnetic, optical and SEM imaging experiments, and analysed data. L.R.-L. and A.K. provided bacteria cultures and TEM images. M.D.L., R.L.W. and A.Y conceived the application of the NV-diamond wide-field imager to biomagnetism. All authors discussed the results and participated in writing the manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to R. L. Walsworth.

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The authors declare no competing financial interests.

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Le Sage, D., Arai, K., Glenn, D. et al. Optical magnetic imaging of living cells. Nature 496, 486–489 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature12072

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