Journal Article10.1111/J.1365-2818.2009.03274.X
Focused ion beam-scanning electron microscope: exploring large volumes of atherosclerotic tissue.
Liesbeth H. P. Hekking,M.N. Lebbink,D. A. M. de Winter,Chris T.W.M. Schneijdenberg,C.M. Brand,Bruno M. Humbel,Arie J. Verkleij,Jan A. Post +7 more
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TL;DR: The study of a sample in a correlative way using light and electron microscopy is a promising approach to achieve this; however, it is very laborious and additional ultrastructural techniques might be very valuable to find the places of interest.
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Abstract: Summary
Atherogenesis is a pathological condition in which changes in the ultrastructure and in the localization of proteins occur within the vasculature during all stages of the disease. To gain insight in those changes, high-resolution imaging is necessary. Some of these changes will only be present in a small number of cells, positioned in a ‘sea’ of non-affected cells. To localize this relatively small number of cells, there is a need to first navigate through a large area of the sample and subsequently zoom in onto the area of interest. This approach enables the study of specific cells within their in vivo environment and enables the study of (possible) interactions of these cells with their surrounding cells/environment. The study of a sample in a correlative way using light and electron microscopy is a promising approach to achieve this; however, it is very laborious and additional ultrastructural techniques might be very valuable to find the places of interest.
In this report we show that the focused ion beam-scanning electron microscope is a powerful tool to study biological specimens in a correlative way. With this microscope one can scan for the area of interest at low magnification, in this case the atherosclerotic plaque, and subsequently zoom in, for further analysis on an ultrastructural level, rendering valuable and detailed two- and three-dimensional information of, in this case, the endothelial cells and the vessel wall. Moreover, in combination with pre-embedment labelling of surface exposed antigens, the method allows insight into the 3D distribution of these markers.
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Citations
Imaging three-dimensional tissue architectures by focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy
Andrew J. Bushby,Kenneth M.Y. Png,Kenneth M.Y. Png,Robert D. Young,Christian Pinali,Carlo Knupp,Andrew J. Quantock +6 more
TL;DR: A scanning electron microscope equipped with a focused gallium ion beam, used to sequentially mill away the sample surface, and a backscattered electron (BSE) detector, generates a large series of images that can be combined into a 3D rendered image of stained and embedded biological tissue.
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Recent advances in focused ion beam technology and applications
TL;DR: Focused ion beam microscopes are extremely versatile and powerful instruments for materials research as discussed by the authors, when coupled in a system with a scanning electron microscope, offer the opportunity for novel sample imaging, sectioning, specimen preparation, three-dimensional (3D) nano-to- macroscale tomography, and high resolution rapid prototyping.
153
Correlative 3D imaging of whole mammalian cells with light and electron microscopy
Gavin E. Murphy,Kedar Narayan,Bradley C. Lowekamp,Lisa M. Hartnell,Jurgen Heymann,Jing Fu,Sriram Subramaniam +6 more
TL;DR: Qualitative advances that extend the current capabilities of ion-abrasion scanning electron microscopy (IA-SEM) are reported and it is demonstrated that by combining correlative imaging with newly developed tools for automated image processing, small 100nm-sized entities can be localized in SEM image stacks of whole mammalian cells.
89
The cellular basis of platelet secretion: Emerging structure/function relationships.
Shilpi Yadav,Brian Storrie +1 more
TL;DR: The literature is reviewed and the wide array of 3-dimensional, high-resolution structural approaches that have emerged in the last few years are discussed to reveal new and unanticipated outcomes and some of these are discussed.
The organization of the wall filaments and characterization of the matrix structures of Toxoplasma gondii cyst form.
Leandro Lemgruber,Pietro Lupetti,Erica S. Martins-Duarte,Wanderley de Souza,Rossiane C. Vommaro +4 more
TL;DR: The encystation process is a key step in Toxoplasma gondii life cycle, allowing the parasite to escape from the host immune system and the transmission among the hosts, according to a detailed characterization of the formation and structure of the cyst stage.
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