A stable cryogenic fluorescence microscope for correlative super-resolution light and electron microscopy
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Cryogenic correlative light and electron microscopy (cryo-CLEM) enables visualization of biological specimens with molecular specificity while preserving near-native macromolecular structure. However, the severely limited resolution of conventional cryo-fluorescence microscopes restricts the accuracy of correlation with cryo-electron microscopy. Super-resolution cryogenic CLEM (SR-cryo-CLEM) offers a potential solution, but presents substantial technical challenges, including mechanical instability and ice contamination. Here, we introduce a modular cryogenic light microscope optimized for single-molecule localization microscopy (cryo-SMLM) that mitigates such limitations. The system is constructed primarily from off-the-shelf components, enabling straightforward and cost-effective assembly, and is operated using fully open-source Python software for flexible and customizable control. The mechanically and thermally stabilized architecture, combined with an axial focus-lock system, maintains sample positioning within a standard deviation of 40 nm. Ice contamination is minimized by imaging inside a purged enclosure, enabling prolonged acquisitions. Together, the platform provides robust localization precision, reproducible imaging performance, and an accessible solution for SR-cryo-CLEM.