Platelets (Jul 2020)

Use of electron microscopy to study megakaryocytes

  • Cyril Scandola,
  • Mathieu Erhardt,
  • Jean-Yves Rinckel,
  • Fabienne Proamer,
  • Christian Gachet,
  • Anita Eckly

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/09537104.2019.1708885
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31, no. 5
pp. 589 – 598

Abstract

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Electron microscopy (EM) has a long history in megakaryocyte (MK) cellular biology. This chapter shows how the electron microscope, since its first appearance almost 90 years ago, has occupied center stage in the studies of MK morphology and function. It describes some of the more productive EM techniques that have shaped our understanding of the physiology of thrombopoiesis. These include the standard transmission and scanning EM techniques as well as the new imaging methods, correlative microscopy and volume EM which provide information on the 3D organization of MKs on different scales: single organelles, whole cells and tissues. For each technique, we list the advantages and limitations, the resolution that can be achieved, the technical difficulties and the applications in MK biology.

Keywords