Confocal microscopes, sometimes referred to as laser scanning confocal
microscopes, take advantage of the properties of light to produce images
at a single optical plane through thick specimens. To accomplish this,
confocal microscopes rely on the property of certain molecules to produce
fluorescence, and on the ability to collect this fluorescence from the
plane of focus while rejecting all other fluorescence.
Fluorescence
Many molecules have the ability to absorb certain wavelengths of light.
For example, plant leaves appear green because the chlorophyll molecules
in the leaf absorb wavelengths of light in the blue and red region of
the spectrum. After subtracting the blue and red light from sunlight,
much of the visible light that remains is green. Once absorbed, the light
energy can be converted into chemical energy (photosynthesis) or into
heat. Some molecules have the ability to re-emit light energy, and this
process is called fluorescence. The light that is emitted always contains
less energy than the light that was absorbed (remember thermodynamics?),
and is thus always at a longer wavelength.
This property of certain molecules to produce fluorescence at a very
particular wavelength (called "emission") after absorbing light
of a specific wavelength (called "excitation") has been exploited
for decades by traditional fluorescence microscopy. There is a mind-boggling
assortment of dyes that localize to specific cellular structures or organelles,
can respond to changes in ion concentrations, or can be attached to almost
any antibody. Since the mid-1990's, it has become possible to cause a
cell to manufacture its own fluorescent molecule. By introducing a jellyfish
gene coding for a molecule called Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP), researchers
produced a tool capable of "reporting" on the location and timing
of expression of any gene of interest.
Confocal
While traditional fluorescence microscopy provides useful information
about the localization of fluorescent compounds, the images produced can
look blurry or out of focus. This is because the emitted light that is
collected to form the image originate from any optical plane within the
specimen. To overcome this limitation, confocal microscopy was developed.
Confocal microscopy uses light from a laser through the objective of a
standard light microscope to excite a specimen within a narrow plane of
focus. Any emission of light from out-of-focus planes is rejected by the
pinhole, or confocal aperture. A simplified lightpath for a confocal microscope
is illustrated below. Only light that passes through the aperture contributes
to the image formed by the photomultiplier tube. A photomultiplier
tube is an extremely sensitive device for converting photons into
an electrical signal.

In addition to scanning the specimen in the X and Y dimensions, confocal
microscopes can control the focal plane by raising and lowering the microscope
stage. Using a stepper motor, the stage can be stepped in tiny increments
(0.1 microns) through a sample. The software controlling the microscope
can store the image information as it steps through a sample, allowing
a true three-dimensional analysis of specimens.
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