Cryo-electron microscopy of vitrified specimens

Jacques Dubochet(European Bioinformatics Institute), Marc Adrian(European Bioinformatics Institute), Jiin-Ju Chang(European Bioinformatics Institute), Jean‐Claude Homo(European Bioinformatics Institute), Jean Lepault(European Bioinformatics Institute), Alasdair W. McDowall(European Bioinformatics Institute), Patrick Schultz(European Bioinformatics Institute)
Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
May 1, 1988
Cited by 2,356Open Access
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Abstract

Cryo-electron microscopy of vitrified specimens was just emerging as a practical method when Richard Henderson proposed that we should teach an EMBO course on the new technique. The request seemed to come too early because at that moment the method looked more like a laboratory game than a useful tool. However, during the months which ellapsed before the start of the course, several of the major difficulties associated with electron microscopy of vitrified specimens found surprisingly elegant solutions or simply became non-existent. The course could therefore take place under favourable circumstances in the summer of 1983. It was repeated the following years and cryo-electron microscopy spread rapidly. Since that time, water, which was once the arch enemy of all electronmicroscopists, became what it always was in nature – an integral part of biological matter and a beautiful substance.


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