Affiliation: | a Department of Structural Biology, Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Am Klopferspitz 18a, D-82152, Martinsried, Germany b Laboratory of Structural Biology, National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National Institutes of Health, 50 South Drive MSC 8025, Bethesda, MD 20892-8025, USA |
Abstract: | Electron cryotomography has unique potential for three-dimensional visualization of macromolecular complexes at work in their natural environment. This approach is based on reconstructing three-dimensional volumes from tilt series of electron micrographs of cells preserved in their native states by vitrification. Resolutions of 5–8 nm have already been achieved and the prospects for further improvement are good. Since many intracellular activities are conducted by complexes in the megadalton range with dimensions of 20–50 nm, current resolutions should suffice to identify many of them in tomograms. However, residual noise and the dense packing of cellular constituents hamper interpretation. Recently, tomographic data have been collected on vitrified eukaryotic cells (Medalia et al., Science (2002) in press). Their cytoplasm was found to be markedly less crowded than in the prokaryotes previously studied, in accord with differences in crowding between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells documented by other (indirect) biophysical methods. The implications of this observation are twofold. First, complexes should be more easily identifiable in tomograms of eukaryotic cytoplasm. This applies both to recognizing known complexes and characterizing novel complexes. An example of the latter—a 5-fold symmetric particle is—given. Second, electron cryotomography offers an incisive probe to examine crowding in different cellular compartments. |