4.8 Article

Quantitative 3D imaging of whole, unstained cells by using X-ray diffraction microscopy

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1000156107

Keywords

coherent diffractive imaging; equally sloped tomography; lensless imaging; iterative phase-retrieval algorithms; oversampling

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM081409-01A1, CA41996]
  2. University of California [IT107-10166]
  3. US Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-FG02-06ER46276]
  4. RIKEN [BL29XUL]

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Microscopy has greatly advanced our understanding of biology. Although significant progress has recently been made in optical microscopy to break the diffraction-limit barrier, reliance of such techniques on fluorescent labeling technologies prohibits quantitative 3D imaging of the entire contents of cells. Cryoelectron microscopy can image pleomorphic structures at a resolution of 3-5 nm, but is only applicable to thin or sectioned specimens. Here, we report quantitative 3D imaging of a whole, unstained cell at a resolution of 50-60 nm by X-ray diffraction microscopy. We identified the 3D morphology and structure of cellular organelles including cell wall, vacuole, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, granules, nucleus, and nucleolus inside a yeast spore cell. Furthermore, we observed a 3D structure protruding from the reconstructed yeast spore, suggesting the spore germination process. Using cryogenic technologies, a 3D resolution of 5-10 nm should be achievable by X-ray diffraction microscopy. This work hence paves a way for quantitative 3D imaging of a wide range of biological specimens at nanometer-scale resolutions that are too thick for electron microscopy.

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