Correlative three-dimensional super-resolution and block-face electron microscopy of whole vitreously frozen cells

David P. Hoffman(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Gleb Shtengel(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), C. Shan Xu(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Kirby R. Campbell(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Melanie Freeman(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Lei Wang(Boston Children's Hospital), Daniel E. Milkie(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), H. Amalia Pasolli(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Nirmala Iyer(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), John Bogovic(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Daniel R. Stabley(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Abbas Shirinifard(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Song Pang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), D. R. Peale(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Kathy Schaefer(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Wim Pomp(Boston Children's Hospital), Chi‐Lun Chang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jennifer Lippincott‐Schwartz(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Tomas Kirchhausen(Boston Children's Hospital), David J. Solecki(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Eric Betzig(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Harald F. Hess(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Science
January 16, 2020
Cited by 362Open Access
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Abstract

Within cells, the spatial compartmentalization of thousands of distinct proteins serves a multitude of diverse biochemical needs. Correlative super-resolution (SR) fluorescence and electron microscopy (EM) can elucidate protein spatial relationships to global ultrastructure, but has suffered from tradeoffs of structure preservation, fluorescence retention, resolution, and field of view. We developed a platform for three-dimensional cryogenic SR and focused ion beam-milled block-face EM across entire vitreously frozen cells. The approach preserves ultrastructure while enabling independent SR and EM workflow optimization. We discovered unexpected protein-ultrastructure relationships in mammalian cells including intranuclear vesicles containing endoplasmic reticulum-associated proteins, web-like adhesions between cultured neurons, and chromatin domains subclassified on the basis of transcriptional activity. Our findings illustrate the value of a comprehensive multimodal view of ultrastructural variability across whole cells.


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