Kremer A, Lippens S, Bartunkova S, Asselbergh B, Blanpain C, Fendrych M, Goossens A, Holt M, Janssens S, Krols M, Larsimont J-C, Mc Guire C, Nowack M K, Saelens X, Schertel A, Schepens B, Slezak M, Timmerman V, Theunis C, VAN Brempt R, Visser Y, Guérin C J
VIB Bio Imaging Core, Gent, VIB, Technologiepark 927, Gent, B-9052, Belgium.
Inflammation Research Center, VIB, Technologiepark 927, Gent, B-9052, Belgium.
J Microsc. 2015 Aug;259(2):80-96. doi: 10.1111/jmi.12211. Epub 2015 Jan 26.
When electron microscopy (EM) was introduced in the 1930s it gave scientists their first look into the nanoworld of cells. Over the last 80 years EM has vastly increased our understanding of the complex cellular structures that underlie the diverse functions that cells need to maintain life. One drawback that has been difficult to overcome was the inherent lack of volume information, mainly due to the limit on the thickness of sections that could be viewed in a transmission electron microscope (TEM). For many years scientists struggled to achieve three-dimensional (3D) EM using serial section reconstructions, TEM tomography, and scanning EM (SEM) techniques such as freeze-fracture. Although each technique yielded some special information, they required a significant amount of time and specialist expertise to obtain even a very small 3D EM dataset. Almost 20 years ago scientists began to exploit SEMs to image blocks of embedded tissues and perform serial sectioning of these tissues inside the SEM chamber. Using first focused ion beams (FIB) and subsequently robotic ultramicrotomes (serial block-face, SBF-SEM) microscopists were able to collect large volumes of 3D EM information at resolutions that could address many important biological questions, and do so in an efficient manner. We present here some examples of 3D EM taken from the many diverse specimens that have been imaged in our core facility. We propose that the next major step forward will be to efficiently correlate functional information obtained using light microscopy (LM) with 3D EM datasets to more completely investigate the important links between cell structures and their functions.
20世纪30年代,电子显微镜(EM)问世,使科学家首次得以窥探细胞的纳米世界。在过去的80年里,电子显微镜极大地增进了我们对复杂细胞结构的理解,这些结构是细胞维持生命所需的各种功能的基础。一个难以克服的缺点是其固有的缺乏体积信息,这主要是由于透射电子显微镜(TEM)中可观察的切片厚度有限。多年来,科学家们一直在努力通过连续切片重建、TEM断层扫描以及扫描电子显微镜(SEM)技术(如冷冻断裂)来实现三维(3D)电子显微镜成像。尽管每种技术都能提供一些特殊信息,但即使要获得一个非常小的3D电子显微镜数据集,也需要大量时间和专业知识。大约20年前,科学家们开始利用扫描电子显微镜对嵌入组织块进行成像,并在扫描电子显微镜腔内对这些组织进行连续切片。显微镜学家们首先使用聚焦离子束(FIB),随后使用机器人超薄切片机(连续块面,SBF-SEM),能够以可以解决许多重要生物学问题的分辨率高效收集大量的3D电子显微镜信息。我们在此展示一些从我们核心设施中成像的众多不同标本中获取的3D电子显微镜图像示例。我们认为,下一步的主要进展将是有效地将使用光学显微镜(LM)获得的功能信息与3D电子显微镜数据集相关联,以更全面地研究细胞结构与其功能之间的重要联系。