4.4 Review

Negative staining across holes: Application to fibril and tubular structures

Journal

MICRON
Volume 39, Issue 2, Pages 168-176

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.micron.2007.07.003

Keywords

negative staining; holey carbon; cryo-negative staining; ammonium molybdate; trehalose; fibril; amyloid-beta; pepstatin A; collagen; fibril; DNA; nanotube; streptavidin; frataxin; iron core; nanotechnology

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The negative staining technique, when used with holey carbon support films, presents superior imaging conditions than is the case when samples are adsorbed to continuous carbon films. A demonstration of this negative staining approach is presented, using ammonium molybdate in combination with trehalose, applied to several fibrillar and tubular samples. Fibrils formed from the amyloid-P peptide and the protease inhibitor pepstain A spread very well unsupported across holes and the different polymorphic fibril forms can be readily assessed. However, tubular forms of amyloid-beta have a tendency to be flattened, due to surface tension forces prior to and during specimen drying. Sub-fibril assembly forms and D-banded rat tail type I collagen fibres are presented. The air-dried collagen images produced are shown to contain almost as much detail as those obtainable by cryo-negative staining. Fragile DNA and DNA-protein nanotubes are also shown to yield superior quality images to those produced on continuous carbon films. The iron-storage protein, frataxin, creates elongated oligomeric assemblies, containing bound ferrihydrite microcrystals. The iron particles within these flexuous oligomers can be defined in the presence of ammonium molybdate, but they are more readily demonstrated if the frataxin is spread across holes in the presence of trehalose alone. The samples used here serve to show the likely benefit obtainable from negative staining across holes for a range of other fibrillar and tubular samples in biology, medicine and nanobiotechnology. (C) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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