4.6 Review Book Chapter

Electron Microscopy of Biological Materials at the Nanometer Scale

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF MATERIALS RESEARCH, VOL 42
Volume 42, Issue -, Pages 33-58

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-matsci-070511-155004

Keywords

specimen preparation; radiation damage; frozen-hydrated samples; cryo-electron tomography; single-particle electron microscopy; electron crystallography

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Electron microscopy of biological matter uses three different imaging modalities: (a) electron crystallography, (b) single-particle analysis, and (c) electron tomography. Ideally, these imaging modalities are applied to frozen-hydrated samples to ensure an optimal preservation of the structures under scrutiny. Cryo-electron microscopy of biological matter has made important advances in the past decades. It has become a research tool that further expands the scope of structural research into unique areas of cell and molecular biology, and it could augment the materials research portfolio in the study of soft and hybrid materials. This review addresses how researchers using transmission electron microscopy can derive structural information at high spatial resolution from fully hydrated specimens, despite their sensitivity to ionizing radiation, despite the adverse conditions of high vacuum for samples that have to be kept in aqueous environments, and despite their low contrast resulting from weakly scattering building blocks.

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