Freeze-substitution and conventional electron microscopy in the study of medically-important bacteria

1993 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 65-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. R. Paul ◽  
L. L. Graham ◽  
T. J. Beveridge
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):  
D. Johnson ◽  
P. Moriearty

Since several species of Schistosoma, or blood fluke, parasitize man, these trematodes have been subjected to extensive study. Light microscopy and conventional electron microscopy have yielded much information about the morphology of the various stages; however, scanning electron microscopy has been little utilized for this purpose. As the figures demonstrate, scanning microscopy is particularly helpful in studying at high resolution characteristics of surface structure, which are important in determining host-parasite relationships.


Author(s):  
Robert L. Ochs

By conventional electron microscopy, the formed elements of the nuclear interior include the nucleolus, chromatin, interchromatin granules, perichromatin granules, perichromatin fibrils, and various types of nuclear bodies (Figs. 1a-c). Of these structures, all have been reasonably well characterized structurally and functionally except for nuclear bodies. The most common types of nuclear bodies are simple nuclear bodies and coiled bodies (Figs. 1a,c). Since nuclear bodies are small in size (0.2-1.0 μm in diameter) and infrequent in number, they are often overlooked or simply not observed in any random thin section. The rat liver hepatocyte in Fig. 1b is a case in point. Historically, nuclear bodies are more prominent in hyperactive cells, they often occur in proximity to nucleoli (Fig. 1c), and sometimes they are observed to “bud off” from the nucleolar surface.


1999 ◽  
Vol 5 (S2) ◽  
pp. 430-431
Author(s):  
H. Hohenberg

Cells are information driven systems. Cellular information is stored in certain molecules, at certain places, in a certain concentration, at a particular time and under given physiological conditions. The goal of biological electron microscopy is to provide this information network, to correlate the cellular ultrastructure and its function. In this sense, it is essential to combine the high resolution of our electron optical instruments with a high information density of the biological system. Most of the structural information is lost in the course of the different preparation steps prior to electron microscopy. For this reason it is necessary that all preparation steps such as: 1. sampling: e.g. excision of tissues, 2. cryoimmobilisation, 3. follow-up procedures: e.g. freeze-fracturing, freeze-substitution and embedding, should have identical high quality levels preventing or minimizing the loss of structural information. To this aim our methodological activities focus on the development of special micro-techniques for the sampling of: a) native tissues, with an automatic fine-needle biopsy technique (1), of b) suspensions, with a special cellulose capillary technique (2), of c) cell monolayer, with a thin film cultivation technique (3) and the application/perfection of cryotechniques (high-pressure freezing (HPF) and freeze-substitution). In particular, the high-pressure freezer (HPM 010, Bal-Tec) has proven to be a highly useful tool for successful cryoimmobilization of almost any kinds of cells and tissues, bulk specimens (< 200 μm in thickness) being included. This freezing technique does not require any cryoprotection, and if combined with our micro-techniques the risk of inducing artefacts as a result of specimen preparation prior to freezing is minimized.


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