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Published March 26, 2023 | Submitted
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A cryogenic, coincident fluorescence, electron and ion beam microscope

Abstract

Cryogenic electron tomography (cryo-ET) combined with sub-tomogram averaging, allows in-situ visualisation and structure determination of macromolecular complexes at sub-nanometre resolution. Cryogenic focused ion beam (cryo-FIB) micromachining is used to prepare a thin lamella-shaped sample out of a frozen-hydrated cell for cryo-ET imaging, but standard cryo-FIB fabrication is blind to the precise location of the structure or proteins of interest. Fluorescence-guided focused ion beam (FIB) milling at target locations requires multiple sample transfers prone to contamination, and relocation and registration accuracy is often insufficient for 3D targeting. Here, we present in-situ fluoresence microscopy-guided FIB fabrication of a frozen-hydrated lamella to solve this problem: we built a coincident 3-beam cryogenic correlative microscope by retrofitting a compact cryogenic microcooler, custom positioning stage, and an inverted widefield fluorescence microscope (FM) on an existing focused ion-beam scanning electron microscope (FIB-SEM). We show FM controlled targeting at every milling step in the lamella fabrication process, validated with transmission electron microscope (TEM) tomogram reconstructions of the target regions. The ability to check the lamella during and after the milling process results in a higher success rate in the fabrication process and will increase the throughput of fabrication for lamellae suitable for high-resolution imaging.

Additional Information

The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY 4.0 International license. Drosophila flight muscle myofibrils were kindly provided by E.H. Chan & F. Schnorrer (Institut de Biologie du Développement de Marseille), and zebrafish myofibrils by Y. Hinits & M. Gautel (King's College London). We express our gratitude to Fulvio Reggiori (University of Groningen, Netherlands) for providing the HeLa cells and are thankful to Mingjun Xu for help during sample preparation. We thank Andries Effting (Delmic B.V.) for helpful discussions, and we would like to thank Ryan Lane (TU Delft) for his contribution in various Python developments. The majority of the 3D CAD design was done by Thomas van der Heijden (Delmic B.V.), for which we are gratefull. This work was financially supported by; NWO-TTW project No 17152 to JPH, NIH grant RO1 AI127401 to GJJ, European SME2 grant No 879673 to Delmic B.V. and Eurostars grant No E13008 to SH and SR. Author contributions. SH conceived and initialized the collaboration between the different research groups. Initial ideas and insight into the cryo-ET workflow was provided by JPH, AJJ, GJJ, AJK, JMP, SR and RW. The majority of the conceptual system design was done by DBB with feedback from JPH, AJJ, GJJ, AJK, JMP, SR, RW and SH. DBB, CTHJ and MGFL, planned and carried out the experiments. ST and ZW assisted in doing cryo-FIB milling and performed cryo-ET experiments. EBW helped with light microscopy experiments and PSF analysis. MJK performed the stage reposition measurements. AJJ and CAP prepared the HeLa samples whilst ZW provided the myofibril samples. DBB processed and analyzed the data with input from JPH, AJJ, CTHJ, MGFL, ST, ZW and EBW. DBB wrote the manuscript with input from EBW, AJJ, and JPH. All authors discussed the results and commented on the manuscript. Declaration of Competing Interest. AJJ, GJJ, CTHJ, MJK, AJK, MGFL, CAP, JMP, SR, ST, ZW, EBW and RW declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper. DBB is, and CTHJ and MGFL were, employees of Delmic BV, JPH and SH have a financial interest in Delmic BV.

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Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
December 13, 2023