4.3 Review

Cryo-electron tomography in biology and medicine

Journal

ANNALS OF ANATOMY-ANATOMISCHER ANZEIGER
Volume 191, Issue 5, Pages 427-445

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.aanat.2009.04.003

Keywords

Cryo-electron microscopy; Cryo-electron tomography; Electron cryotomography; Structural biology; 3D imaging

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During the last six decades electron microscopy (EM) has been essential to ultrastructural studies of the cell to understand the fundamentals of cellular morphology and processes underlying diseases. More recently, electron tomography (ET) has emerged as a novel approach able to provide three-dimensional (3D) information on cells and tissues at molecular level. Electron tomography is comparable to medical tomographic techniques like CAT, PET and MRI in the sense that it provides a 3D view of an object, yet it does so at a cellular scale and with nanometer resolution. Electron tomography has the unique ability to visualize molecular assemblies, cytoskeletal elements and organelles within cells. The three-dimensional. perspective it provides has revised our understanding of cellular organization and its relation with morphological changes in normal development and disease. Cryo-electron tomography of vitrified samples at cryogenic temperatures combines excellent structural preservation with direct high-resolution imaging. The use of cryo-preparation and imaging techniques eliminates artifacts induced by plastic embedding and staining of the samples is circumvented. This review describes the technique of cryo-electron tomography, its basic principles, cryo-specimen preparation, tomographic data acquisition and image processing. A number of illustrative examples ranging from whole cells, cytoskeletal filaments, viruses and organelles are presented along with a comprehensive list of research articles employing cryo-electron tomography as the key ultrastuctural technique. (C) 2009 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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