High-pressure freezing and freeze substitution of plant tissue

Author(s):  
William P. Sharp ◽  
Robert W. Roberson

The aim of ultrastructural investigation is to analyze cell architecture and relate a functional role(s) to cell components. It is known that aqueous chemical fixation requires seconds to minutes to penetrate and stabilize cell structure which may result in structural artifacts. The use of ultralow temperatures to fix and prepare specimens, however, leads to a much improved preservation of the cell’s living state. A critical limitation of conventional cryofixation methods (i.e., propane-jet freezing, cold-metal slamming, plunge-freezing) is that only a 10 to 40 μm thick surface layer of cells can be frozen without distorting ice crystal formation. This problem can be allayed by freezing samples under about 2100 bar of hydrostatic pressure which suppresses the formation of ice nuclei and their rate of growth. Thus, 0.6 mm thick samples with a total volume of 1 mm3 can be frozen without ice crystal damage. The purpose of this study is to describe the cellular details and identify potential artifacts in root tissue of barley (Hordeum vulgari L.) and leaf tissue of brome grass (Bromus mollis L.) fixed and prepared by high-pressure freezing (HPF) and freeze substitution (FS) techniques.

Author(s):  
Marek Malecki ◽  
James Pawley ◽  
Hans Ris

The ultrastructure of cells suspended in physiological fluids or cell culture media can only be studied if the living processes are stopped while the cells remain in suspension. Attachment of living cells to carrier surfaces to facilitate further processing for electron microscopy produces a rapid reorganization of cell structure eradicating most traces of the structures present when the cells were in suspension. The structure of cells in suspension can be immobilized by either chemical fixation or, much faster, by rapid freezing (cryo-immobilization). The fixation speed is particularly important in studies of cell surface reorganization over time. High pressure freezing provides conditions where specimens up to 500μm thick can be frozen in milliseconds without ice crystal damage. This volume is sufficient for cells to remain in suspension until frozen. However, special procedures are needed to assure that the unattached cells are not lost during subsequent processing for LVSEM or HVEM using freeze-substitution or freeze drying. We recently developed such a procedure.


Author(s):  
J.Z. Kiss ◽  
L.A. Staehelin

Electron microscopy of chemically fixed plant tissues has lead to important insights into the relationship between structure and function of plant cells. However, the slow rate of chemical fixation (seconds to minutes) potentially permits numerous artifacts to be induced. Most of these limitations ofs chemical fixatives can be overcome by the use of cryofixation techniques since cell structure is stabilized rapidly (milliseconds). Several types of cryofixation techniques have been developed such as cold metal block freezing and propane jet freezing. Although application of these techniques has yielded exciting new information, they are limiting in that specimens can be preserved only to a relatively shallow depth (approx. 40 μm). In contrast, under optimal conditions, high pressure freezing (HPF) at 2100 bar can produce excellent freezing of biological samples up to 600 μm in thickness. Since a commercial HPF apparatus has only recently become available, the number of systematic structural studies of biological samples utilizing HPF is still rather limited, and basic questions concerning specimen preparation and processing, HPF artifacts, and interpretation of images need to be addressed.


2001 ◽  
Vol 7 (S2) ◽  
pp. 728-729
Author(s):  
Paul Walther

Imaging of fast frozen samples is the most direct approach for electron microscopy of biological specimen in a defined physiological state. It prevents chemical fixation and drying artifacts. High pressure freezing allows for ice-crystal-free cryo-fixation of tissue pieces up to a thickness of 200 urn and a diameter of 2 mm without prefixation. Such a frozen disc, however, is not directly amenable to electron microscopic observation: The structures of interest have to be made amenable to the electron beam, and the structures of interest must produce enough contrast to be recognized in the electron microscope. This can be achieved by freeze fracturing, cryo-sectioning or freeze substitution.The figures show high pressure frozen bakers yeast saccharomyces cerevisiae in the cryo-SEM (Figures 1 and 2) and after freeze substitution in the TEM (Figure 3). For high pressure freezing either a Bal-Tec HPM 010 (Princ. of Liechtenstein; Figures 1 and 2), or a Wohlwend HPF (Wohlwend GmbH, Sennwald, Switzerland; Figure 3) were used.


Author(s):  
LUCY RU-SIU YIN

The ultimate aim of ultrastructural fixation of biological specimen is to preserve all the compartments in their native state. Cryofixation is a superior method than conventional chemical fixation in reaching this goal. However, ice crystal formation during cryofixation often damages the structures. High pressure (2100 bar) freezing provides a way to alter freezing properties while cool down the specimen at a relatively high rate, minimizing the ice crystal formation. Nearly vitrified samples(up to 500 um) have been obtained with this method. Samples in suspension tend to get lost during high pressure freezing. The low percentage (∼30%) of successfully cryofixed specimens can be improved if the sample completely fills the cavity of the metal specimen carriers in which the specimen is frozen. Various methods to overcome sample loss are reported in this study.


2012 ◽  
Vol 18 (S2) ◽  
pp. 836-837
Author(s):  
C.B. Johnson ◽  
A. Smith ◽  
S. Vitha ◽  
A. Holzenburg

Extended abstract of a paper presented at Microscopy and Microanalysis 2012 in Phoenix, Arizona, USA, July 29 – August 2, 2012.


1999 ◽  
Vol 5 (S2) ◽  
pp. 428-429
Author(s):  
Martin Müller ◽  
Jens Listemann ◽  
Eyal Shimony ◽  
Paul Walther

Sample preparation techniques for electron-microscopy (EM) dictate our perception of the microworld: any structural information which is lost or distorted during preparation can not be regenerated later and might lead to wrong interpretation of the observed micrograph.Cryofixation based procedures for specimen preparation can avoid most of the structural alterations associated with standard techniques based on chemical fixation. The ultrastructure can be represented in a near “native state” thanks to the high time resolution for dynamic cellular events (1).High pressure freezing (2) permits to cryoimmobilize biological samples up to approx. 200μm thick, in contrast to rapid freezing procedures at ambient pressure that are useful to cryoimmobilize samples up to 10-20 μm thick. The actual samplethickness that can be adequately frozen (=without visible damage due to ice crystal formation in freeze-substituted or freeze-fractured specimens) depends on the concentration of naturally occuring substances that exhibit cryoprotective activities.


Author(s):  
R.E. Crang ◽  
M. Mueller ◽  
K. Zierold

Obtaining frozen-hydrated sections of plant tissues for electron microscopy and microanalysis has been considered difficult, if not impossible, due primarily to the considerable depth of effective freezing in the tissues which would be required. The greatest depth of vitreous freezing is generally considered to be only 15-20 μm in animal specimens. Plant cells are often much larger in diameter and, if several cells are required to be intact, ice crystal damage can be expected to be so severe as to prevent successful cryoultramicrotomy. The very nature of cell walls, intercellular air spaces, irregular topography, and large vacuoles often make it impractical to use immersion, metal-mirror, or jet freezing techniques for botanical material.However, it has been proposed that high-pressure freezing (HPF) may offer an alternative to the more conventional freezing techniques, inasmuch as non-cryoprotected specimens may be frozen in a vitreous, or near-vitreous state, to a radial depth of at least 0.5 mm.


Author(s):  
Robert W. Roberson

The use of cryo-techniques for the preparation of biological specimens in electron microscopy has led to superior preservation of ultrastructural detail. Although these techniques have obvious advantages, a critical limitation is that only 10-40 μm thick cells and tissue layers can be frozen without the formation of distorting ice crystals. However, thicker samples (600 μm) may be frozen well by rapid freezing under high-pressure (2,100 bar). To date, most work using cryo-techniques on fungi have been confined to examining small, thin-walled structures. High-pressure freezing and freeze substitution are used here to analysis pre-germination stages of specialized, sexual spores (teliospores) of the plant pathogenic fungus Gymnosporangium clavipes C & P.Dormant teliospores were incubated in drops of water at room temperature (25°C) to break dormancy and stimulate germination. Spores were collected at approximately 30 min intervals after hydration so that early cytological changes associated with spore germination could be monitored. Prior to high-pressure freezing, the samples were incubated for 5-10 min in a 20% dextran solution for added cryoprotection during freezing. Forty to 50 spores were placed in specimen cups and holders and immediately frozen at high pressure using the Balzers HPM 010 apparatus.


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