Craig S, Staehelin L A
Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder 80309-0347.
Eur J Cell Biol. 1988 Apr;46(1):81-93.
We have used plant root tips frozen under high pressure in conjunction with freeze-fracture electron microscopy a) to evaluate the quality of freezing of unfixed, non-cryoprotected tissues obtainable with this method, b) to examine the structure of cells frozen under high pressure, c) to evaluate the usefulness of high pressure freezing to preserve transient membrane events, and d) to look for artifacts caused by the high pressure. A single artifact of high pressure, possibly related to the collapse of air spaces during pressurization before freezing, manifested itself as long tears or folds in the plasma membrane. Excellent freezing, as evidenced by the smooth, turgid appearance of all membrane systems and the lack of aggregated cytosolic materials was observed in 10 to 20% of samples. In the best preserved specimens freezing was uniform throughout the sample volume and all organelles were readily identified. In the remaining ones, a gradient of ice crystal sizes was seen; cells within 50 to 100 microns of the surface being better preserved than those in the interior. Cortical microtubules appeared well preserved as were close associations of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) with nuclear, Golgi and plasma membranes. Junctions between the ER and nuclear membrane were constricted and much thinner (30 nm in diameter) than in chemically-fixed, thin-sectioned tissue, and although no continuities between the ER and Golgi membranes were observed, many Golgi stacks had an adjacent ER cisterna either at the cis or trans face. Both Golgi and ER cisternae exhibited distinct, round dilations indicative of vesicle blebbing or vesicle fusion events. Characteristic disc- and horseshoe-shaped infoldings of the plasma membrane corresponding to fused secretory vesicle and/or membrane recycling structures were also prominent in many cells. Short extensions of the cortical ER cisternae were regularly observed appressed against these plasma membrane infoldings suggesting a functional role for the ER in vesicle-mediated secretion and/or membrane recycling. Many lipid bodies were intimately associated with the ER, some with their surface monolayer fused with the cytoplasmic leaflet of the ER membrane. Our findings demonstrate that high pressure freezing can provide excellent morphological preservation of intact tissues and can preserve fast, transient membrane events such as those associated with vesicle fusion and vesicle blebbing. We conclude that this is the best available method for freezing relatively large (up to 0.6 mm thick) tissue samples for study by electron microscopy.
我们将高压下冷冻的植物根尖与冷冻断裂电子显微镜相结合,目的如下:a)评估用此方法获得的未固定、无冷冻保护剂组织的冷冻质量;b)检查高压冷冻下细胞的结构;c)评估高压冷冻对保存瞬时膜事件的有效性;d)寻找高压导致的假象。高压造成的一种假象可能与冷冻前加压过程中气孔塌陷有关,表现为质膜上出现长的撕裂或褶皱。在10%至20%的样本中观察到了良好的冷冻效果,所有膜系统外观平滑、肿胀,且没有聚集的胞质物质。在保存最好的标本中,整个样本体积内的冷冻是均匀的,所有细胞器都易于识别。在其余样本中,可见冰晶大小的梯度;表面50至100微米范围内的细胞比内部细胞保存得更好。皮层微管看起来保存良好,内质网(ER)与核膜、高尔基体膜和质膜的紧密联系也是如此。内质网与核膜之间的连接处收缩,比化学固定、薄切片组织中的连接处薄得多(直径30纳米),虽然未观察到内质网与高尔基体膜之间的连续性,但许多高尔基体堆叠在顺面或反面都有相邻的内质网池。高尔基体和内质网池都呈现出明显的圆形扩张,表明有囊泡出芽或囊泡融合事件。许多细胞中还可见到与融合分泌囊泡和/或膜回收结构相对应的质膜特征性盘状和马蹄形内褶。经常观察到皮层内质网池的短延伸紧贴这些质膜内褶,这表明内质网在囊泡介导的分泌和/或膜回收中起作用。许多脂质体与内质网密切相关,有些脂质体的表面单层与内质网膜的胞质小叶融合。我们的研究结果表明,高压冷冻能为完整组织提供出色的形态学保存,并能保存快速、瞬时的膜事件,如与囊泡融合和囊泡出芽相关的事件。我们得出结论,这是用于冷冻相对较大(厚度达0.6毫米)组织样本以供电子显微镜研究的最佳可用方法。