Three-Dimensional Imaging and Electrophysiology of Live Aplysia Neurons during Volume Pertubation: Confocal Light and High-Voltage Electron Microscopy

1995 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 75-85
Author(s):  
Michael Fejtl ◽  
Donald H. Szarowski ◽  
Diane Decker ◽  
Karolyn Buttle ◽  
David O. Carpenter ◽  
...  

We have used confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM), high-voltage electron microscopy (HVEM), and intracellular recording techniques to study volume changes in cultured Aplysia pacemaker neurons. Hyper- and hypo-tonic artificial sea water (ASW) decreased the pacemaker frequency and led to depolarization and hyperpolarization, respectively. However, when negative or positive current was injected into neurons in normal ASW, the frequency decreased with hyperpolarization but increased with depolarization. This suggests that the membrane potential is not the only factor underlying the reduction of the pacemaker activity.Changes in cell volume were monitored with a CLSM and paralleled progressive changes in osmolarity. The neurons swelled and shrank nonuniformly, and, although an optical section through the middle of the cell was monitored every 4 s for as long as 14 min, a regulatory volume decrease or increase was never observed, indicating an osmometer-like behavior. The time course of shrinkage was faster than swelling after returning to control ASW after a hypotonic shock, reflecting a possible mechanical stress on the cytoskeleton.Thick sections observed in the HVEM confirmed that membrane infoldings were present in our cultured Aplysia neurons. We hypothesize that a change in length of the latter in shrunken and swollen neurons could provide an explanation on the ultrastructural level for the increase and decrease in membrane surface area observed by CLSM. We conclude that by combining a confocal microscope with an electrophysiological set-up, three-dimensional morphology and physiological properties can be studied in living cells in real-time. This approach provides the means to correlate cell volume-related alterations and physiology.

Author(s):  
Lee D. Peachey ◽  
Clara Franzini-Armstrong

The effective study of biological tissues in thick slices of embedded material by high voltage electron microscopy (HVEM) requires highly selective staining of those structures to be visualized so that they are not hidden or obscured by other structures in the image. A tilt pair of micrographs with subsequent stereoscopic viewing can be an important aid in three-dimensional visualization of these images, once an appropriate stain has been found. The peroxidase reaction has been used for this purpose in visualizing the T-system (transverse tubular system) of frog skeletal muscle by HVEM (1). We have found infiltration with lanthanum hydroxide to be particularly useful for three-dimensional visualization of certain aspects of the structure of the T- system in skeletal muscles of the frog. Specifically, lanthanum more completely fills the lumen of the tubules and is denser than the peroxidase reaction product.


Author(s):  
G. E. Tyson ◽  
M. J. Song

Natural populations of the brine shrimp, Artemia, may possess spirochete- infected animals in low numbers. The ultrastructure of Artemia's spirochete has been described by conventional transmission electron microscopy. In infected shrimp, spirochetal cells were abundant in the blood and also occurred intra- and extracellularly in the three organs examined, i.e. the maxillary gland (segmental excretory organ), the integument, and certain muscles The efferent-tubule region of the maxillary gland possessed a distinctive lesion comprised of a group of spirochetes, together with numerous small vesicles, situated in a cave-like indentation of the base of the tubule epithelium. in some instances the basal lamina at a lesion site was clearly discontinuous. High-voltage electron microscopy has now been used to study lesions of the efferent tubule, with the aim of understanding better their three-dimensional structure.Tissue from one maxillary gland of an infected, adult, female brine shrimp was used for HVEM study.


2016 ◽  
Vol 57 (6) ◽  
pp. 918-921 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuhisa Sato ◽  
Shunya Tashiro ◽  
Yohei Yamaguchi ◽  
Takanori Kiguchi ◽  
Toyohiko J. Konno ◽  
...  

1975 ◽  
Vol 66 (2) ◽  
pp. 404-413 ◽  
Author(s):  
J J Paulin

The unitary nature of the chondriome of two species of trypanosomatids, Blastocrithidia culicis and Trypanosoma cruzi, has been demonstrated by utilizing serial thick-sectioning techniques combined with high voltage electron microscopy. Profiles of mitochondrial elements seen in thin sections and suspected to be parts of a continuum were confirmed by serial thick sectioning (0.25-0.50 mum thick) and stereopair analysis to be parts of the same mitochondrion. Three-dimensional models obtained from tracings of mitochondrial profiles on cellulose acetate reveal the mitochondrion of B. culicis to consist of a posterior mass with six tubular extensions extending upward and terminating in the anterior apex. The kinetoplast was found suspended between two of the tubular extensions, or less frequently, protuding as a nodule from one of the extensions. A bifurcation of one of the extensions was found in some specimens. The mitochondrion of T. cruzi consists of a triangular-shaped convoluted tubule, the base being the kinetoplast portion while the apex is directed posteriorly. The mitochondrion bifurcates behind the flagellar pocket, lateral to the kinetoplast, sending two entwined extensions into the tenuous anterior apex. Whether the mitochondrion of T. cruzi is unitary in the trypomastigote form was not determined in this study, since only epimastigote forms were used.


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