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1.
A quick-freeze, rapid-dry method for processing unfixed tissue for electron microscopy has been developed. The technique employs freezing on a cryogenchilled metal surface and drying in a cryosorption vacuum apparatus that allows osmium-vapor fixation and epoxy-resin embedment under high vacuum. Liver, kidney, bone marrow, and monolayer cultures of ventricular myocytes were selected as tissue specimens representing a wide range of physical properties, to demonstrate the practical aspects of achieving good ultrastructural morphology by freeze drying. A comparison was made between freeze drying and conventional processing using aldehyde fixation and alcohol dehydration. The preservation of cellular ultrastructure achieved by freeze drying allowed the identification of specific cell types within each specimen. Membranous organelles were well preserved, surrounded by cytoplasmic ground substance devoid of ice crystal damage. Electron-dense material was observed within the rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi cisternae and vesicles of frozen-dried, but not conventionally processed cells. This suggests the preservation by freeze drying of cytoplasmic components otherwise extracted from the cell by solvent exposure.  相似文献   

2.
Soft X-ray cryo-microscopy (cryo-XT) offers an ideal complement to electron cryo-microscopy (cryo-EM). Cryo-XT is applicable to samples more than an order of magnitude thicker than cryo-EM, albeit at a more modest resolution of tens of nanometers. Furthermore, the natural contrast obtained in the “water-window” by differential absorption by organic matter vs water yields detailed images of organelles, membranes, protein complexes, and other cellular components. Cryo-XT is thus ideally suited for tomography of eukaryotic cells. The increase in sample thickness places more stringent demands on sample preparation, however. The standard method for cryo-EM, i.e., plunging to a cryogenic fluid such as liquid ethane, is no longer ideally suited to obtain vitrification of thick samples for cryo-XT. High pressure freezing is an alternative approach, most closely associated with freeze-substitution and embedding, or with electron cryo-microscopy of vitreous sections (CEMOVIS). We show here that high pressure freezing can be adapted to soft X-ray tomography of whole vitrified samples, yielding a highly reliable method that avoids crystallization artifacts and potentially offers improved imaging conditions in samples not amenable to plunge-freezing.  相似文献   

3.
目的 比较冰冻切片技术中几种防冰晶方法对切片保存效果的影响。方法 分别使用液氮骤冷组织、高渗透压脱水法、单纯OCT胶包埋等几种方法后行冰冻切片、HE染色后,分别于当天、1、3、6个月后比较其染色效果,选出最佳保存方法。结果 单纯OCT包埋法在1个月后染色明显变浅,冰晶数量最多,而在3、6个月后染色基本接近背底色,冰晶面积已占据近半个视野,组织结构破坏极其严重;高渗透压脱水法在1个月后染色深度及冰晶数量上无明显变化,但3、6个月后则明显变浅,冰晶数量明显增加;而低温骤冷法在染色后的几个月,染色深度及冰晶的数量均无明显的变化,结构基本维持染色当天的状态。结论 低温骤冷法是这三种防冰晶法中最利于保存切片的方法。  相似文献   

4.
Cryo-electron microscopy of vitreous sections (CEMOVIS) is, in principle, the ultimate method of specimen preparation. It consists in ultra-rapid cooling of a sizable sample of biological material that is cut into thin sections. These are subsequently observed at low temperature in their fully hydrated vitreous state. Here, we show that CEMOVIS reveals the native state of cells and tissues with unprecedented quality and resolution. What is seen differs considerably from what conventional electron microscopy has shown previously and it is seen with more details. Our findings are demonstrated with images of cyanobacteria and skin.  相似文献   

5.
Chemical fixation protocols provided unsatisfactory preserved material for ultrastructural studies on Jaagiella alpicola Vischer (Chlorophyta). Instead, several methods of rapid freeze fixation followed by freeze substitution were applied. For fast freeze fixation, two methods were tried: plunge immersion freezing in liquid propane using a home-made device, and projection against a copper block cooled by either liquid nitrogen or liquid helium. Each method furnished well fixed material. The quality of the fixed samples was quite similar whether propane or the cryoblock cooled with liquid nitrogen was used. Liquid helium, however, provided superior results. After fixation the samples were cryosubstituted, using acetone or methanol as organic solvent with a chemical fixative added. Acetone gave better results than methanol as a substitution solvent when high temperature embedding was performed. The best cryosubstitution for ultrastructural studies was that in which osmium tetroxide or a mixture of osmium tetroxide and urany acetate was used.  相似文献   

6.
Since the 1940s transmission electron microscopy (TEM) has been providing biologists with ultra-high resolution images of biological materials. Yet, because of laborious and time-consuming protocols that also demand experience in preparation of artifact-free samples, TEM is not considered a user-friendly technique. Traditional sample preparation for TEM used chemical fixatives to preserve cellular structures. High-pressure freezing is the cryofixation of biological samples under high pressures to produce very fast cooling rates, thereby restricting ice formation, which is detrimental to the integrity of cellular ultrastructure. High-pressure freezing and freeze substitution are currently the methods of choice for producing the highest quality morphology in resin sections for TEM. These methods minimize the artifacts normally associated with conventional processing for TEM of thin sections. After cryofixation the frozen water in the sample is replaced with liquid organic solvent at low temperatures, a process called freeze substitution. Freeze substitution is typically carried out over several days in dedicated, costly equipment. A recent innovation allows the process to be completed in three hours, instead of the usual two days. This is typically followed by several more days of sample preparation that includes infiltration and embedding in epoxy resins before sectioning. Here we present a protocol combining high-pressure freezing and quick freeze substitution that enables plant sample fixation to be accomplished within hours. The protocol can readily be adapted for working with other tissues or organisms. Plant tissues are of special concern because of the presence of aerated spaces and water-filled vacuoles that impede ice-free freezing of water. In addition, the process of chemical fixation is especially long in plants due to cell walls impeding the penetration of the chemicals to deep within the tissues. Plant tissues are therefore particularly challenging, but this protocol is reliable and produces samples of the highest quality.  相似文献   

7.
Plane front freezing presents the possibility of encapsulating individual cells in the ice phase. The cells may also be pushed ahead of the plane front ice interface, as is always the case for conventional dendritic freezing, where the cells are pushed ahead of the thickening dendrite arms. Cells which are encapsulated during freezing are exposed to hypotonic liquid (pure water) initially upon thawing, while cells which are pushed into the last liquid to freeze are exposed to hypertonic liquid upon thawing. Some exposure to hypertonic intercellular liquid prior to freezing may be required to build up the salt and CPA content in the intracellular liquid and thereby avoid intracellular ice formation at the given cooling rate. Encapsulation of cells by a plane front ice interface should result in three regions of cell survival in the sample: an initial region of cell death due to intracellular ice formation, a final region of cell death due to overexposure to hypertonic intercellular liquid, and an intermediate region of cell survival, where neither damage mechanism has operated to a lethal level. An advantage of plane front freezing over dendritic freezing is that the regions of cell survival and death should be geometrically separate in the sample, rather than mixed at the dendritic microstructural level, as is the case for dendritic freezing. Samples containing populations with very high or very low survival rates for spermatozoa could be obtained by simply cutting up the frozen sample.  相似文献   

8.
The emergence of electron tomography as a tool for three dimensional structure determination of cells and tissues has brought its own challenges for the preparation of thick sections. High pressure freezing in combination with freeze substitution provides the best method for obtaining the largest volume of well-preserved tissue. However, for deeply embedded, heterogeneous, labile tissues needing careful dissection, such as brain, the damage due to anoxia and excision before cryofixation is significant. We previously demonstrated that chemical fixation prior to high pressure freezing preserves fragile tissues and produces superior tomographic reconstructions compared to equivalent tissue preserved by chemical fixation alone. Here, we provide further characterization of the technique, comparing the ultrastructure of Flock House Virus infected DL1 insect cells that were (1) high pressure frozen without fixation, (2) high pressure frozen following fixation, and (3) conventionally prepared with aldehyde fixatives. Aldehyde fixation prior to freezing produces ultrastructural preservation superior to that obtained through chemical fixation alone that is close to that obtained when cells are fast frozen without fixation. We demonstrate using a variety of nervous system tissues, including neurons that were injected with a fluorescent dye and then photooxidized, that this technique provides excellent preservation compared to chemical fixation alone and can be extended to selectively stained material where cryofixation is impractical.  相似文献   

9.
Summary We describe here an apparatus that permits rapid freeze fixation of whole cells, which are then prepared by freeze substitution and resin embedment for examination in the EM. The freezing device utilizes a rotary solenoid that rapidly plunges the specimen holder, a formvar-film-covered thin wire loop, into a well of stirred liquid propane at –180C. The rotary solenoid allows for an adjustable, repeatable immersion rate. Substitution takes place at –80 C in acetone with 2% OsO4 and is followed by en bloc staining in either hafnium tetrachloride or uranyl acetate. We have utilized these techniques on plant cells, for which there has been relatively little published work when compared to other organisms. The results show that, with the versatile specimen holder and rapid, repeatable immersion rates, different cell types, including pollen, stamen hairs, and germinating moss spores, can be rapidly frozen with repeatable success. The improved preservation achieved with rapid freeze fixation over conventional chemical fixation reveals itself particularly in the structure of the plasmamembrane, the cytoskeleton, chromatin, and certain endomembrane systems.  相似文献   

10.
Ice Morphology: Fundamentals and Technological Applications in Foods   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Freezing is the process of ice crystallization from supercooled water. Ice crystal morphology plays an important role in the textural and physical properties of frozen and frozen-thawed foods and in processes such as freeze drying, freeze concentration, and freeze texturization. Size and location of ice crystals are key in the quality of thawed tissue products. In ice cream, smaller ice crystals are preferred because large crystals results in an icy texture. In freeze drying, ice morphology influences the rate of sublimation and several morphological characteristics of the freeze-dried matrix as well as the biological activity of components (e.g., in pharmaceuticals). In freeze concentration, ice morphology influences the efficiency of separation of ice crystals from the concentrated solution. The cooling rate has been the most common variable controlling ice morphology in frozen and partly frozen systems. However, several new approaches show promise in controlling nucleation (consequently, ice morphology), among them are the use of ice nucleation agents, antifreeze proteins, ultrasound, and high pressure. This paper summarizes the fundamentals of freezing, methods of observation and measurement of ice morphology, and the role of ice morphology in technological applications.  相似文献   

11.
The ultrastructure of the vegetative cells of Nostoc fiagelliforme Born. et Flah. was investigated with high pressure freezing and freeze substitution technique and compared with the results obtained by using conventional preparation methods. During the processes of chemical fixation, dehydration and embedding, the cell structures might be more artificially modified than that obtained from high pressure freezing and freeze substitution. With the present method, the sheath of N. fiageUiforme could be well-penetrated and no extra big space could exist between the cell and the sheath. The cell protoplasm rarely shrinked. Some fine structures of cell inclusions and unit membranes became visualized. Many bacteria were harbored in the sheath. In addition, the presence of big vacuoles in the cell of N. fiageUiforme as well as the presence of bacteria in the sheath shown in the present preparation for cyanobacteria has not been described so far in the literature.  相似文献   

12.
高压冷冻和低温替代技术制备的发菜营养细胞的超微结构   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
祝建  王俊 《Acta Botanica Sinica》1998,40(10):901-905
应用高压冷冻和低温替代技术系统研究了发菜(NostocflageliformeBorn.etFlah.)营养细胞的超微结构并与常规方法进行了比较。结果显示:在化学固定、脱水和包埋后,细胞结构出现一些人为的改变。而应用高压冷冻和低温替代技术,细胞和胶质鞘之间不会出现大的间隙并且细胞质也很少收缩。细胞内各种膜结构清晰可见。有关大量细菌位于发菜的胶质鞘中以及细胞中具有大的液泡是首次报道。  相似文献   

13.
Methods for preserving specimen hydration in protein crystals were pursued in the early 1970s as a prerequisite for protein crystallography using an electron microscope. Three laboratories approached this question from very different directions. One built a differentially pumped hydration chamber that could maintain the crystal in a liquid water environment, a second maintained hydration by rapidly freezing the protein crystal and examining it in a cold stage, and the third replaced the water of hydration by using glucose in the same way as one had previously used "negative stains". Each of these early efforts succeeded in preserving the structures of protein crystals at high resolution within the vacuum of the electron microscope, as demonstrated by electron diffraction patterns. The next breakthrough came in the early 1980s when a technique was devised to preserve noncrystalline specimens by freezing them within vitreous ice. Since then, with the development of high stability cold stages and transfer mechanisms compatible with many instrument platforms, and by using commercially provided low dose imaging techniques to avoiding radiation damage, there has been an explosion of applications. These now include single particles, helical filaments, 2-D arrays and even whole cells, where the most exciting recent applications involve cryoelectron tomography. These achievements and possibilities generate a new set of research opportunities associated with increasing the reliability and throughput with which specimens can be studied by cryoEM.  相似文献   

14.
祝建  胡正海 《西北植物学报》1999,19(6):97-103,T001
通过一些实例介绍了高压冷冻,冷冻置换和冷冻超薄切片等低温电镜样品制备技术,并且与传统方法对照,说明低温电镜技术的优越性,其中,发菜(Nostoc flagelliforme)营养细胞的冷冻超薄切片(未经化学固定,脱水)所显示的超微结构更客观地反映了生物样品的自然生理状态。此外,应用高压冷冻和冷冻置换的免疫标记电镜技术,首次对发菜营养细胞中的DNA进行定位,明确了核区的位置及范围。  相似文献   

15.
Summary In order to improve the ultrastructural preservation of the female gametophyte ofPetunia x hybrida andBrassica napus we tested several cryofixation techniques and compared the results with those of conventional chemical fixation methods. Ovules fixed with glutaraldehyde and osmium tetroxide in the presence or absence of potassium ferrocyanide showed poor cell morphological and ultrastructural preservation. In ovules cryo-fixed by plunging into liquid propane, the cell morphology was well preserved. However, at the ultrastructural level structure-distorting ice crystals were detected in all tissues. Due to the large size of the ovules, cryofixation by plunging in liquid propane is not adequate for ultrastructural studies. In contrast,P. x hybrida andB. napus ovules cryo-fixed by high pressure freezing showed improved cell morphological as well as ultrastructural preservation of the embryo sac and the surrounding integumentary tissues. The contrast of the cellular membranes after freeze substitution with 2% osmium tetroxide and 0.1% uranyl acetate in dry acetone was high. At the ultrastructural level, the most prominent improvements were: straight plasma membranes which were appressed to the cell walls; turgid appearing organelles with smooth surface contours; minimal extraction of cytoplasmic and extracellular substances. In contrast to the chemically fixed ovules, in high pressure frozen ovules numerous microtubules and multivesicular bodies could be distinguished.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of high pressure freezing on mammalian nerve tissue   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Summary Vitrification of biological specimens in liquid nitrogen can be achieved under high pressure (2,100 bars). This procedure obviates the use of aldehyde fixation and cryoprotection (glycerol). The present work demonstrates its applicability to the freeze-etching of mammalian brain tissue. Freeze-fracture replicas from rat cerebellar cortex and subfornical organ prepared by this method are compared to conventionally processed material using aldehyde fixation, glycerination and freezing with Freon. The formation of large ice crystals is prevented in tissue blocks up to 0.5 mm thick; deep etching is markedly enhanced. Cytoplasmic microstructures such as mitochondrial cristae, microtubules and microfilaments, are readily observable against a finely granulated cytosol matrix. An additional advantage is the combined application with freeze-substitution.  相似文献   

17.
Freeze tolerance – the ability to survive internal ice formation – has evolved repeatedly in insects, facilitating survival in environments with low temperatures and/or high risk of freezing. Surviving internal ice formation poses several challenges because freezing can cause cellular dehydration and mechanical damage, and restricts the opportunity to metabolise and respond to environmental challenges. While freeze‐tolerant insects accumulate many potentially protective molecules, there is no apparent ‘magic bullet’ – a molecule or class of molecules that appears to be necessary or sufficient to support this cold‐tolerance strategy. In addition, the mechanisms underlying freeze tolerance have been minimally explored. Herein, we frame freeze tolerance as the ability to survive a process: freeze‐tolerant insects must withstand the challenges associated with cooling (low temperatures), freezing (internal ice formation), and thawing. To do so, we hypothesise that freeze‐tolerant insects control the quality and quantity of ice, prevent or repair damage to cells and macromolecules, manage biochemical processes while frozen/thawing, and restore physiological processes post‐thaw. Many of the molecules that can facilitate freeze tolerance are also accumulated by other cold‐ and desiccation‐tolerant insects. We suggest that, when freezing offered a physiological advantage, freeze tolerance evolved in insects that were already adapted to low temperatures or desiccation, or in insects that could withstand small amounts of internal ice formation. Although freeze tolerance is a complex cold‐tolerance strategy that has evolved multiple times, we suggest that a process‐focused approach (in combination with appropriate techniques and model organisms) will facilitate hypothesis‐driven research to understand better how insects survive internal ice formation.  相似文献   

18.
Evidence in the literature shows that ice crystals that form in the nucleus of many rapidly cooled cells appear much larger than the ice crystals that form in the surrounding cytoplasm. We investigated the phenomenon in our laboratory using the techniques of freeze substitution and low temperature scanning electron microscopy on liver tissue frozen by liquid nitrogen plunge freezing. This method is estimated to cool the tissue at 1000°C/min. The results from these techniques show that the ice crystal sizes were statistically significantly larger in the nucleus than in the cytoplasm. It is our belief that this finding is important to cryobiology considering its potential role in the process of freezing and the mechanisms of damage during freezing of cells and tissues.  相似文献   

19.
Infrared video thermography was used to observe ice nucleation temperatures, patterns of ice formation, and freezing rates in nonacclimated and cold acclimated leaves of a spring (cv Quest) and a winter (cv Express) canola (Brassica napus). Distinctly different freezing patterns were observed, and the effect of water content, sugars, and soluble proteins on the freezing process was characterized. When freezing was initiated at a warm subzero temperature, ice growth rapidly spread throughout nonacclimated leaves. In contrast, acclimated leaves initiated freezing in a horseshoe pattern beginning at the uppermost edge followed by a slow progression of ice formation across the leaf. However, when acclimated leaves, either previously killed by a slow freeze (2 degrees C h(-1)) or by direct submersion in liquid nitrogen, were refrozen their freezing pattern was similar to nonacclimated leaves. A novel technique was developed using filter paper strips to determine the effects of both sugars and proteins on the rate of freezing of cell extracts. Cell sap from nonacclimated leaves froze 3-fold faster than extracts from acclimated leaves. The rate of freezing in leaves was strongly dependent upon the osmotic potential of the leaves. Simple sugars had a much greater effect on freezing rate than proteins. Nonacclimated leaves containing high water content did not supercool as much as acclimated leaves. Additionally, wetted leaves did not supercool as much as nonwetted leaves. As expected, cell solutes depressed the nucleation temperature of leaves. The use of infrared thermography has revealed that the freezing process in plants is a complex process, reminding us that many aspects of freezing tolerance occur at a whole plant level involving aspects of plant structure and metabolites rather than just the expression of specific genes alone.  相似文献   

20.
The interactions between freezing kinetics and subsequent storage temperatures and their effects on the biological activity of lactic acid bacteria have not been examined in studies to date. This paper investigates the effects of three freezing protocols and two storage temperatures on the viability and acidification activity of Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus CFL1 in the presence of glycerol. Samples were examined at -196 degrees C and -20 degrees C by freeze fracture and freeze substitution electron microscopy. Differential scanning calorimetry was used to measure proportions of ice and glass transition temperatures for each freezing condition tested. Following storage at low temperatures (-196 degrees C and -80 degrees C), the viability and acidification activity of L. delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus decreased after freezing and were strongly dependent on freezing kinetics. High cooling rates obtained by direct immersion in liquid nitrogen resulted in the minimum loss of acidification activity and viability. The amount of ice formed in the freeze-concentrated matrix was determined by the freezing protocol, but no intracellular ice was observed in cells suspended in glycerol at any cooling rate. For samples stored at -20 degrees C, the maximum loss of viability and acidification activity was observed with rapidly cooled cells. By scanning electron microscopy, these cells were not observed to contain intracellular ice, and they were observed to be plasmolyzed. It is suggested that the cell damage which occurs in rapidly cooled cells during storage at high subzero temperatures is caused by an osmotic imbalance during warming, not the formation of intracellular ice.  相似文献   

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