Royal Society Open Science (Jan 2017)

A modified ‘NanoSuit®’ preserves wet samples in high vacuum: direct observations on cells and tissues in field-emission scanning electron microscopy

  • Yasuharu Takaku,
  • Hiroshi Suzuki,
  • Hideya Kawasaki,
  • Isao Ohta,
  • Daisuke Ishii,
  • Satoshi Hirakawa,
  • Takami Tsutsui,
  • Haruko Matsumoto,
  • Sayuri Takehara,
  • Chinatsu Nakane,
  • Kana Sakaida,
  • Chiaki Suzuki,
  • Yoshinori Muranaka,
  • Hirotoshi Kikuchi,
  • Hiroyuki Konno,
  • Masatsugu Shimomura,
  • Takahiko Hariyama

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.160887
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 3

Abstract

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Although field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM) has proven very useful in biomedical research, the high vacuum required (10−3 to 10−7 Pa) precludes direct observations of living cells and tissues at high resolution and often produces unwanted structural changes. We have previously described a method that allows the investigator to keep a variety of insect larvae alive in the high vacuum environment of the electron microscope by encasing the organisms in a thin, vacuum-proof suit, the ‘NanoSuit®'. However, it was impossible to protect wet tissues freshly excised from intact organisms or cultured cells. Here we describe an improved ‘NanoSuit' technique to overcome this limitation. We protected the specimens with a surface shield enhancer (SSE) solution that consists of glycerine and electrolytes and found that the fine structure of the SSE-treated specimens is superior to that of conventionally prepared specimens. The SSE-based NanoSuit affords a much stronger barrier to gas and/or liquid loss than the previous NanoSuit did and, since it allows more detailed images, it could significantly help to elucidate the ‘real' organization of cells and their functions.

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