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Cryofixation during live‐imaging enables millisecond time‐correlated light and electron microscopy.
- Source :
-
Journal of Microscopy . Nov2018, Vol. 272 Issue 2, p87-95. 9p. 4 Diagrams. - Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- Summary: Correlating live‐cell imaging with electron microscopy is among the most promising approaches to relate dynamic functions of cells or small organisms to their underlying ultrastructure. The time correlation between light and electron micrographs, however, is limited by the sample handling and fixation required for electron microscopy. Current cryofixation methods require a sample transfer step from the light microscope to a dedicated instrument for cryofixation. This transfer step introduces a time lapse of one second or more between live imaging and the fixed state, which is studied by electron microscopy. In this work, we cryofix Caenorhabditis elegans directly within the light microscope field of view, enabling millisecond time‐correlated live imaging and electron microscopy. With our approach, the time‐correlation is limited only by the sample cooling rate. C. elegans was used as a model system to establish compatibility of in situ cryofixation and subsequent transmission electron microscopy (TEM). TEM images of in situ cryofixed C. elegans show that the ultrastructure of the sample was well preserved with this method. We expect that the ability to correlate live imaging and electron microscopy at the millisecond scale will enable new paradigms to study biological processes across length scales based on real‐time selection and arrest of a desired state. Lay Description: Researchers seek to link cellular functions to their smallest structural components. Currently this requires correlation of two imaging techniques, live imaging and electron microscopy. Current correlative methods, however, have limited time resolution due to the sample preparation procedures for electron microscopy. Following live imaging, samples are transferred from the light microscope to a cryofixation, or ultra‐fast freezing, instrument. The biological process progresses until the sample freezes, 1 second or more after the last live image. In this work, samples are cryofixed directly within the light microscope field of view. By eliminating the transfer step, time correlation between light and electron microscopy images of our samples is limited only by the freezing rate to the order of milliseconds rather than seconds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 00222720
- Volume :
- 272
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Journal of Microscopy
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 132394008
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1111/jmi.12747