Correlative light and electron microscopy (CLEM) is an emerging technique which combines functional information provided by fluorescence microscopy (FM) with the high-resolution structural information of electron microscopy (EM). So far, correlative cryo microscopy of frozen-hydrated samples has not reached better than micrometre range accuracy. Here, a method is presented that enables the correlation between fluorescently tagged proteins and electron cryo tomography (cryoET) data with nanometre range precision. Specifically, thin areas of vitrified whole cells are examined by correlative fluorescence cryo microscopy (cryoFM) and cryoET. Novel aspects of the presented cryoCLEM workflow not only include the implementation of two independent electron dense fluorescent markers to improve the precision of the alignment, but also the ability of obtaining an estimate of the correlation accuracy for each individual object of interest. The correlative workflow from plunge-freezing to cryoET is detailed step-by-step for the example of locating fluorescence-labelled adenovirus particles trafficking inside a cell.
Caveolae are invaginated plasma membrane domains involved in mechanosensing, signaling, endocytosis, and membrane homeostasis. Oligomers of membrane-embedded caveolins and peripherally attached cavins form the caveolar coat whose structure has remained elusive. Here, purified Cavin1 60S complexes were analyzed structurally in solution and after liposome reconstitution by electron cryotomography. Cavin1 adopted a flexible, net-like protein mesh able to form polyhedral lattices on phosphatidylserine-containing vesicles. Mutating the two coiled-coil domains in Cavin1 revealed that they mediate distinct assembly steps during 60S complex formation. The organization of the cavin coat corresponded to a polyhedral nano-net held together by coiled-coil segments. Positive residues around the C-terminal coiled-coil domain were required for membrane binding. Purified caveolin 8S oligomers assumed discshaped arrangements of sizes that are consistent with the discs occupying the faces in the caveolar polyhedra. Polygonal caveolar membrane profiles were revealed in tomograms of native caveolae inside cells. We propose a model with a regular dodecahedron as structural basis for the caveolae architecture.caveolae | coat proteins | coat assembly | membrane organization | electron cryomicroscopy
We
introduce a super-resolution technique for fluorescence cryo-microscopy
based on photoswitching of standard genetically encoded fluorescent
marker proteins in intact mammalian cells at low temperature (81 K).
Given the limit imposed by the lack of cryo-immersion objectives,
current applications of fluorescence cryo-microscopy to biological
specimens achieve resolutions between 400–500
nm only. We demonstrate that the single molecule characteristics
of reversible photobleaching of mEGFP and mVenus at liquid nitrogen
temperature are suitable for the basic concept of single molecule
localization microscopy. This enabled us to perform super-resolution
imaging of vitrified biological samples and to visualize structures
in unperturbed fast frozen cells for the first time with a structural
resolution of ∼125 nm (average single molecule localization
accuracy ∼40 nm), corresponding to a 3–5 fold resolution improvement.
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