smICA: Open-Source Software for Quantitative, Lifetime-Resolved Mapping of Absolute Fluorophore Concentrations in Living Cells
Tomasz Kalwarczyk, Grzegorz Bubak, Jaros{\l}aw Michalski, Antoni Lis, Karina Kwapiszewska, Marta Pilz, Adam Mamot, Olga Perzanowska, Joanna Kowalska, Jacek Jemielity, Robert Ho{\l}yst

TL;DR
smICA is an open-source microscopy analysis tool that enables accurate, lifetime-resolved mapping of absolute fluorophore concentrations in living cells, validated against standard FCS methods.
Contribution
The paper introduces smICA, a novel open-source software that provides quantitative, lifetime-resolved fluorophore concentration mapping with reduced measurement time and validated accuracy.
Findings
Validated against standard FCS measurements in vitro and in vivo.
Achieves accurate concentration mapping with few photons per pixel.
Enables studies of mRNA concentration dynamics in living cells.
Abstract
Advanced microscopy techniques are essential in biomedical research for visualising and tracking biomolecules within living cells and their compartments. Conventional fluorescence microscopy methods, however, often struggle with accurately measuring the absolute concentrations of fluorescent probes in living cells. To overcome these limitations, we introduce an open-source analysis tool, smICA (Single-Molecule Image to Concentration Analyser). The smICA method offers quantitative mapping of absolute fluorophore concentrations, lifetime-resolved filtering methods of the signal, intensity-based cell segmentation, and requires only a few photons per pixel. Our approach also reduces the time required to determine the mean concentration per cell compared to the standard FCS measurement performed in multiple posts. To highlight the robustness of the method, we validated it against standard…
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