4.5 Review

Visualizing Protein Localizations in Fixed Cells: Caveats and the Underlying Mechanisms

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 127, Issue 19, Pages 4165-4173

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.3c01658

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Fluorescence microscopy techniques are widely used in biology for visualizing cellular and subcellular processes. Methods for fixing cells before imaging can induce redistribution of proteins and result in artifacts. This review discusses the ability of commonly used fixation methods to preserve protein localizations and the underlying mechanisms of fixation artifacts. Alternative fixation methods are also discussed to minimize artifacts. Careful selection of a fixation method is necessary to avoid artifacts in fixed-cell fluorescence microscopy.
Fluorescence microscopy techniques have been widely adopted in biology for their ability to visualize the structure and dynamics of a wide range of cellular and subcellular processes. The specificity and sensitivity that these techniques afford have made them primary tools in the characterization of protein localizations within cells. Many of the fluorescence microscopy techniques require cells to be fixed via chemical or alternative methods before being imaged. However, some fixation methods have been found to induce the redistribution of particular proteins in the cell, resulting in artifacts in the characterization of protein localizations and functions under physiological conditions. Here, we review the ability of commonly used cell fixation methods to faithfully preserve the localizations of proteins that bind to chromatin, undergo liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS), and are involved in the formation of various membrane-bound organelles. We also review the mechanisms underlying various fixation artifacts and discuss potential alternative fixation methods to minimize the artifacts while investigating different proteins and cellular structures. Overall, fixed-cell fluorescence microscopy is a very powerful tool in biomedical research; however, each experiment demands the careful selection of an appropriate fixation method to avoid potential artifacts and may benefit from live-cell imaging validation.

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