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Combining high‐pressure freezing with pre‐embedding immunogold electron microscopy and tomography
Author(s) -
Hess Michael W.,
Vogel Georg F.,
Yordanov Teodor E.,
Witting Barbara,
Gutleben Karin,
Ebner Hannes L.,
de Araujo Mariana E. G.,
Filipek Przemyslaw A.,
Huber Lukas A.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
traffic
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.677
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1600-0854
pISSN - 1398-9219
DOI - 10.1111/tra.12575
Subject(s) - immunogold labelling , cryofixation , organelle , electron tomography , biology , electron microscope , microscopy , ultrastructure , biophysics , transmission electron microscopy , immunocytochemistry , immunolabeling , microbiology and biotechnology , context (archaeology) , materials science , anatomy , nanotechnology , pathology , optics , scanning transmission electron microscopy , paleontology , physics , immunohistochemistry , endocrinology , immunology , medicine
Immunogold labeling of permeabilized whole‐mount cells or thin‐sectioned material is widely used for the subcellular localization of biomolecules at the high spatial resolution of electron microscopy (EM). Those approaches are well compatible with either 3‐dimensional (3D) reconstruction of organelle morphology and antigen distribution or with rapid cryofixation—but not easily with both at once. We describe here a specimen preparation and labeling protocol for animal cell cultures, which represents a novel blend of specifically adapted versions of established techniques. It combines the virtues of reliably preserved organelle ultrastructure, as trapped by rapid freezing within milliseconds followed by freeze‐substitution and specimen rehydration, with the advantages of robust labeling of intracellular constituents in 3D through means of pre‐embedding NANOGOLD‐silver immunocytochemistry. So obtained thin and semi‐thick epoxy resin sections are suitable for transmission EM imaging, as well as tomographic reconstruction and modeling of labeling patterns in the 3D cellular context.