Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10913917 | Matrix Biology | 2010 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Conventional approaches for ultrastructural high-resolution imaging of biological specimens induce profound changes in bio-molecular structures. By combining tissue cryo-sectioning with non-destructive atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging we have developed a methodology that may be applied by the non-specialist to both preserve and visualize bio-molecular structures (in particular extracellular matrix assemblies) in situ. This tissue section AFM technique is capable of: i) resolving nm-µm scale features of intra- and extracellular structures in tissue cryo-sections; ii) imaging the same tissue region before and after experimental interventions; iii) combining ultrastructural imaging with complimentary microscopical and micromechanical methods. Here, we employ this technique to: i) visualize the macro-molecular structures of unstained and unfixed fibrillar collagens (in skin, cartilage and intervertebral disc), elastic fibres (in aorta and lung), desmosomes (in nasal epithelium) and mitochondria (in heart); ii) quantify the ultrastructural effects of sequential collagenase digestion on a single elastic fibre; iii) correlate optical (auto fluorescent) with ultrastructural (AFM) images of aortic elastic lamellae.
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Authors
Helen K. Graham, Nigel W. Hodson, Judith A. Hoyland, Sarah J. Millward-Sadler, David Garrod, Anthea Scothern, Christopher E.M. Griffiths, Rachel E.B. Watson, Thomas R. Cox, Janine T. Erler, Andrew W. Trafford, Michael J. Sherratt,