Spatially patterned, spectral single-molecule microscopy

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Abstract Multicolour and spectrally resolved single-molecule microscopy can reveal molecular interactions, nanoscale environments and dynamics, but usually depends on experimentally complex detection architectures based on beam splitting, spectral dispersion or engineered point spread functions. Here we show that spatially patterned detectors offer a conceptually simpler route to spectral single-molecule imaging. By replacing a conventional monochrome camera with a commercially available colour CMOS detector and fitting the raw detector response directly, we recover both molecular position and spectral fingerprint from a single image without optical splitting, channel registration or demosaicing. We term this approach spatial spectral single-molecule microscopy, or S3M. We show that S3M retains single-molecule sensitivity across the visible spectrum, enables robust spectral multiplexing, and supports applications spanning multicolour single-molecule tracking, single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer, multicolour localisation microscopy and spectral PAINT. Although spatial patterning necessarily trades photon efficiency for spectral information, current low noise detectors already provide sufficient performance for a broad range of experiments. Spatially patterned detection therefore establishes a widely accessible strategy for simplified spectral microscopy and single-molecule spectroscopy, and points towards a new class of detector informed photonic measurement schemes for nanoscale imaging. Competing Interest Statement J.S.B., C.L.J. and S.F.L. are inventors on a patent application describing the multicolour microscopy approach (GB Patent Application No. 2505456.0). B.C., V.L. and P.K.S. are employed by AstraZeneca. The remaining authors declare no competing interests.

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last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00