4.1 Article

ELCS in ice: cryo-electron microscopy of nuclear envelope-limited chromatin sheets

Journal

CHROMOSOMA
Volume 123, Issue 3, Pages 303-312

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00412-014-0454-0

Keywords

Chromatin structure; Cryo-electron microscopy; High-pressure/freeze substitution; Aldehyde fixation; Envelope-limited chromatin sheets (ELCS); 30-nm chromatin fibers

Funding

  1. National Center for Research Resources, NIH

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Nuclear envelope-limited chromatin sheets (ELCS) form during excessive interphase nuclear envelope growth in a variety of cells. ELCS appear as extended sheets within the cytoplasm connecting distant nuclear lobes. Cross-section stained images of ELCS, viewed by transmission electron microscopy, resemble a sandwich of apposed nuclear envelopes separated by similar to 30 nm, containing a layer of parallel chromatin fibers. In this study, the ultrastructure of ELCS was compared by three different methods: (1) aldehyde fixation/dehydration/plastic embedding/sectioning and staining, (2) high-pressure freezing/freeze substitution into plastic/sectioning and staining, and (3) high-pressure freezing/cryo-sectioning/cryo-electron microscopy. ELCS could be clearly visualized by all three methods and, consequently, must exist in vivo and are not fixation artifacts. The similar to 30-nm chromatin fibers could only be observed following aldehyde fixation; none were seen in cryo-sections. Electron microscopic tomography tangential views of aldehyde-fixed ELCS suggested an ordering of the separate chromatin fibers adjacent to the nuclear envelope. Possible mechanisms of this chromatin ordering are discussed.

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