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Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy in a Scanning Electron Microscope for the High-Throughput Imaging of Biological Assemblies

Authors :
Kelly A. Parker
Stephanie Ribet
Blaise R. Kimmel
Roberto dos Reis
Milan Mrksich
Vinayak P. Dravid
Source :
Biomacromolecules. 23:3235-3242
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2022.

Abstract

Electron microscopy of soft and biological materials, or "soft electron microscopy", is essential to the characterization of macromolecules. Soft microscopy is governed by enhancing contrast while maintaining low electron doses, and sample preparation and imaging methodologies are driven by the length scale of features of interest. While cryo-electron microscopy offers the highest resolution, larger structures can be characterized efficiently and with high contrast using low-voltage electron microscopy by performing scanning transmission electron microscopy in a scanning electron microscope (STEM-in-SEM). Here, STEM-in-SEM is demonstrated for a four-lobed protein assembly where the arrangement of the proteins in the construct must be examined. STEM image simulations show the theoretical contrast enhancement at SEM-level voltages for unstained structures, and experimental images with multiple STEM modes exhibit the resolution possible for negative-stained proteins. This technique can be extended to complex protein assemblies, larger structures such as cell sections, and hybrid materials, making STEM-in-SEM a valuable high-throughput imaging method.

Details

ISSN :
15264602 and 15257797
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biomacromolecules
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7d41148b4d0f8418f497da90c22a9264