Blue-conversion of organic dyes produces artifacts in multicolor fluorescence imaging

Chem Sci. 2021 May 18;12(25):8660-8667. doi: 10.1039/d1sc00612f. eCollection 2021 Jul 1.

Abstract

Multicolor fluorescence imaging is a powerful tool visualizing the spatiotemporal relationship among biomolecules. Here, we report that commonly employed organic dyes exhibit a blue-conversion phenomenon, which can produce severe multicolor image artifacts leading to false-positive colocalization by invading predefined spectral windows, as demonstrated in the case study using EGFR and Tensin2. These multicolor image artifacts become much critical in localization-based superresolution microscopy as the blue-converted dyes are photoactivatable. We provide a practical guideline for the use of organic dyes for multicolor imaging to prevent artifacts derived by blue-conversion.