Building a Better Microscope

Peng Yin uses the physical properties of DNA to illuminate life’s smallest parts.

Super-resolution microscopy developed in the lab of Peng Yin allows researchers using conventional microscopes to see the inner workings of cells at the single molecule level. Above, microtubules (green) and mitochondria (purple) dominate the intracellular landscape.

Super-resolution microscopy developed in the lab of Peng Yin allows researchers using conventional microscopes to see the inner workings of cells at the single molecule level. Above, microtubules (green) and mitochondria (purple) dominate the intracellular landscape.
Image courtesy of the Wyss Institute at Harvard University

Return to main article:

Nobody had ever seen what tiny structures inside cells actually looked like until Peng Yin used DNA to make this invisible world visible.

DNA is generally regarded as an information-carrying molecule that contains the instructions describing how to arrange amino acids to build proteins, the functional units that carry out life processes. But DNA is also a physical material that can be formed into useful objects, and manipulated to perform dynamic actions. Yin is a master builder and engineer of DNA at the molecular scale. A Harvard Medical School professor of systems biology affiliated with the Wyss Institute, he manipulates nanoscale biological parts to build useful objects such as probes that can detect even a single-base genetic change and imaging technologies with unparalleled resolution, brightness, and scope.

The end to which Yin has focused this expertise—the application of which he is most proud—is bioimaging of tissue samples for diagnostics and basic science research. In this arena, at atomic-level scales, he has used short fragments of DNA as “docking strands” that can capture introduced fluorescent compounds to enhance details in biological structure that would otherwise be invisible to even the best microscopes. Yin can implant DNA docking strands in a cell and program them to bind to a particular protein target. The docking strands, like kelp waving at the bottom of the ocean, await the passing fluorophores that have been injected into the cell. These they capture and release: a binding/unbinding action that causes the fluorophores to emit light. That transient immobilization of a fluorophore in the focal plane of the microscope—held for a moment by the DNA docks—enables complementary software to pinpoint the exact location of particular intracellular features. The resulting acutely sharp images offer resolution that can distinguish features just five nanometers across. This has important biological implications, Yin explains, because five nanometers is about the size of a small protein. 

The tool he has developed will enable biology students to see tiny intracellular structures accurately for the first time, not as imagined in textbook illustrations. And because the tool has now been licensed to a company (Ultivue), the technique will help bioengineers and physicians in their research. “That gives [me] a great amount of satisfaction,” Yin says, “because you not only provide the paper, you actually have something people can use.”

Read more articles by Jonathan Shaw

You might also like

Five Questions with Andrew Knoll

A paleontologist on how to understand earth’s biggest extinction event

Harvard Professor Michael Sandel Wins Philosophy’s Berggruen Prize

The creator of the popular ‘Justice’ course receives a $1 million award.

Harvard Economist Wolfram Schlenker Is Tackling Climate Change

How extreme heat affects our land—and our food supply 

Most popular

What Trump Means for John Roberts’s Legacy

Executive power is on the docket at the Supreme Court.

Harvard Alum Wins Economics Nobel Prize

Philippe Aghion helped show how “creative destruction” drives growth.

Explore More From Current Issue

A vibrant composition of flowers, a bird, and butterflies with a distant manor under a moody sky.

Rachel Ruysch’s Lush (Still) Life

Now on display at the Museum of Fine Arts, a Dutch painter’s art proved a treasure trove for scientists.

People gather near the John Harvard Statue in front of University Hall surrounded by autumn trees.

A Changed Harvard Faces the Future

After a tense summer—and with no Trump settlement in sight—the University continues to adapt.