| In vivo veritas: electron cryotomography of cells Trends in Biotechnology, Volume 20, Issue 8, 1 August 2002, Pages S40-S44 Jürgen M Plitzko, Achilleas S Frangakis, Stephan Nickell, Friedrich Förster, Ariane Gross and Wolfgang Baumeister Abstract Electron cryotomography is a non-invasive technique that provides insight into the supramolecular organization of cells at unprecedented resolution. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (187 kb) |
| The next ice age: cryo-electron tomography of intact cells Trends in Cell Biology, Volume 13, Issue 3, 1 March 2003, Pages 107-110 Alasdair C. Steven and Ueli Aebi Abstract Recent advances in electron tomography are beginning to reveal the internal structure of eukaryotic cells in their native states in three dimensions at molecular resolution. These observations represent the culmination of years of effort to develop protocols for automated data collection, image reconstruction and cryogenic preservation. Cryo-tomograms of cells depict distinct populations of ribosomes, proteasomes and networks of actin filaments interconnected by branching or bundling, apparently controlled by strategically placed actin-associated proteins. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (1060 kb) |
| Tomographic 3D Reconstruction of Quick-Frozen, Ca-Activated Contracting Insect Flight Muscle Cell, Volume 99, Issue 4, 12 November 1999, Pages 421-431 Kenneth A Taylor, Holger Schmitz, Mary C Reedy, Yale E Goldman, Clara Franzini-Armstrong, Hiroyuki Sasaki, Richard T Tregear, Kate Poole, Carmen Lucaveche, Robert J Edwards, Li Fan Chen, Hanspeter Winkler and Michael K Reedy Summary Motor actions of myosin were directly visualized by electron tomography of insect flight muscle quick-frozen during contraction. In 3D images, active crossbridges are usually single myosin heads, bound preferentially to actin target zones sited midway between troponins. Active attached bridges (∼30% of all heads) depart markedly in axial and azimuthal angles from Rayment's rigor acto-S1 model, one-third requiring motor domain (MD) tilting on actin, and two-thirds keeping rigor contact with actin while the light chain domain (LCD) tilts axially from ∼105° to ∼70°. The results suggest the MD tilts and slews on actin from weak to strong binding, followed by swinging of the LCD through an ∼35° axial angle, giving an ∼13 nm interaction distance and an ∼4–6 nm working stroke. Summary | Full Text | PDF (807 kb) |
Copyright © 1997 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 72, Issue 1, 482-489, 1 January 1997
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(97)78689-2
Research Article
R. Grimm, M. Bärmann, W. Häckl, D. Typke, E. Sackmann and W. Baumeister
Semiautomatic single-axis tilt electron tomography has been used to visualize the three-dimensional organization of actin filaments in "phantom cells," i.e. lipid vesicles. The instrumentation consisted of a 120-kV electron microscope equipped with a postcolumn energy filter, which was used in the zero-loss imaging mode. Apart from changing the tilt angle, all steps required for automated tomography, such as recentering the image area, refocusing, and centering the energy-selecting slit, were performed by external computer control. This setup permitted imaging of ice-embedded samples up to a thickness of 800 nm with improved image contrast compared with that produced by tomography with a conventional electron microscope. In spite of the missing-wedge effect that is especially obvious in the study of membrane-filament interaction, single-axis tilt tomography was found to be an appropriate (in fact the only available) method for this kind of investigation. In contrast to random actin networks found in actin gels, actin filaments in and on vesicles with a bending radius of less than approximately 2 microns tend to be arranged in single layers of parallel filaments and often induce an elongated shape of the vesicles. Actin filaments located on the outside usually associate with the vesicle membrane.