Laboratory of Bioengineering and Physical Science, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.
J Microsc. 2010 Sep 1;239(3):223-32. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2818.2010.03376.x.
Elemental mapping in the energy filtering transmission electron microscope (EFTEM) can be extended into three dimensions (3D) by acquiring a series of two-dimensional (2D) core-edge images from a specimen oriented over a range of tilt angles, and then reconstructing the volume using tomographic methods. EFTEM has been applied to imaging the distribution of biological molecules in 2D, e.g. nucleic acid and protein, in sections of plastic-embedded cells, but no systematic study has been undertaken to assess the extent to which beam damage limits the available information in 3D. To address this question, 2D elemental maps of phosphorus and nitrogen were acquired from unstained sections of plastic-embedded isolated mouse thymocytes. The variation in elemental composition, residual specimen mass and changes in the specimen morphology were measured as a function of electron dose. Whereas 40% of the total specimen mass was lost at doses above 10(6) e(-)/nm(2), no significant loss of phosphorus or nitrogen was observed for doses as high as 10(8) e(-)/nm(2). The oxygen content decreased from 25 + or - 2 to 9 + or - 2 atomic percent at an electron dose of 10(4) e(-)/nm(2), which accounted for a major component of the total mass loss. The specimen thickness decreased by 50% after a dose of 10(8) e(-)/nm(2), and a lateral shrinkage of 9.5 + or - 2.0% occurred from 2 x 10(4) to 10(8) e(-)/nm(2). At doses above 10(7) e(-)/nm(2), damage could be observed in the bright field as well in the core edge images, which is attributed to further loss of oxygen and carbon atoms. Despite these artefacts, electron tomograms obtained from high-pressure frozen and freeze-substituted sections of C. elegans showed that it is feasible to obtain useful 3D phosphorus and nitrogen maps, and thus to reveal quantitative information about the subcellular distributions of nucleic acids and proteins.
在能量过滤透射电子显微镜(EFTEM)中,通过从倾斜角度范围内取向的样品中获取一系列二维(2D)核心边缘图像,然后使用断层扫描方法重建体积,可以将元素映射扩展到三维(3D)。EFTEM 已应用于成像 2D 中生物分子的分布,例如塑料包埋细胞切片中的核酸和蛋白质,但尚未进行系统研究来评估束损伤在多大程度上限制了 3D 中的可用信息。为了解决这个问题,从未染色的塑料包埋分离的小鼠胸腺细胞切片中获得了磷和氮的 2D 元素图。随着电子剂量的增加,测量了元素组成、残留标本质量和标本形态变化的变化。虽然在剂量超过 10(6) e(-)/nm(2)时总标本质量损失了 40%,但在高达 10(8) e(-)/nm(2)的剂量下没有观察到磷或氮的明显损失。在 10(4) e(-)/nm(2)的电子剂量下,氧含量从 25 +或-2 下降到 9 +或-2 原子%,这占总质量损失的主要部分。在 10(8) e(-)/nm(2)的剂量后,标本厚度减少了 50%,从 2 x 10(4)到 10(8) e(-)/nm(2),发生了 9.5 +或-2.0%的横向收缩。在剂量高于 10(7) e(-)/nm(2)时,在明场和核心边缘图像中都可以观察到损伤,这归因于进一步损失的氧和碳原子。尽管存在这些伪影,但从 C. elegans 的高压冷冻和冷冻替代切片中获得的电子断层扫描图表明,获得有用的 3D 磷和氮图并因此揭示核酸和蛋白质亚细胞分布的定量信息是可行的。