Correlative fluorescence microscopy, transmission electron microscopy and secondary ion mass spectrometry (CLEM-SIMS) for cellular imaging

2021 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Correlative fluorescence microscopy, transmission electron microscopy and secondary ion mass spectrometry (CLEM-SIMS) for cellular imaging​
Lange, F.; Agüi-Gonzalez, P. ; Riedel, D. ; Phan, N. T. N. ; Jakobs, S.   & Rizzoli, S. O. ​ (2021) 
PLoS One16(5) pp. e0240768​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0240768 

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Authors
Lange, Felix; Agüi-Gonzalez, Paola ; Riedel, Dietmar ; Phan, Nhu T. N. ; Jakobs, Stefan ; Rizzoli, Silvio O. 
Abstract
Electron microscopy (EM) has been employed for decades to analyze cell structure. To also analyze the positions and functions of specific proteins, one typically relies on immuno-EM or on a correlation with fluorescence microscopy, in the form of correlated light and electron microscopy (CLEM). Nevertheless, neither of these procedures is able to also address the isotopic composition of cells. To solve this, a correlation with secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) would be necessary. SIMS has been correlated in the past to EM or to fluorescence microscopy in biological samples, but not to CLEM. We achieved this here, using a protocol based on transmission EM, conventional epifluorescence microscopy and nanoSIMS. The protocol is easily applied, and enables the use of all three technologies at high performance parameters. We suggest that CLEM-SIMS will provide substantial information that is currently beyond the scope of conventional correlative approaches.
Issue Date
2021
Journal
PLoS One 
eISSN
1932-6203
Language
English
Sponsor
Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2021

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