Biology 234 (Spring, 2004)

Cellular Ultrastructure

and Transmission Electron Microscopy

 

      The Bio 234 graduate laboratory is designed to give you a working knowledge of and competence in the standard techniques of transmission electron microscopy.  Those techniques include specimen preparation, sectioning, poststaining of thin and thick sections and negative staining, operation of a TEM, photographic processing and printing, evaluation of negative and print quality, and identification of subcellular structures.  Scheduled laboratory meetings for the first half of the semester will be devoted to demonstrations of the essential procedures.  Limited time in the first six weeks will be allotted to individual work.  However, you will have access to the EM lab (DH 442) and prep room (DH 449) for the entire semester to fulfill the requirements of the course.  Individual attention will be provided during lab periods of the second half of the semester. 

 

Lecture (course code 20692)          TTh 0730-0820, DH 245

Lab (code 20693)  TTh 0830-1120, DH 442 (EM lab; 924-4907) or 449 (prep room; 924-4888)

 

Instructors                        OFFICE       PHONE                    OFFICE HOURS

      Dr. David K. Bruck                DH 349      924-4837               W 230-430, others TBA

      Reza Ehsanian DH 242            924-4887   TBA

 

Required Text  Bozzola, J.J. and Russell, L.D. 1999. Electron Microscopy. Principles and Techniques for Biologists. 2nd edition.  Jones and Bartlett, Boston. 670 pp.

 

Recommended Text  Cross, P.C. and Mercer, K.L. 1993. Cell and Tissue Ultrastructure.  A Functional Perspective. W.H. Freeman, N.Y. 420 pp.

 

Materials  Provided    

- 100 grids

- 6 rolls film (Kodak Technical Pan 6415; 120 mm

- grid box

- vials, envelopes, or boxes for block storage

- glass knife holder

- glassine envelopes

- slide box

- jeweler’s forceps

- 25 sheets photographic paper (Kodak Polycontrast F: multigrade, RC, 8x10"

                                               

      Note that if these supplies are depleted, you will need to obtain your own.  Please return the jeweler’s forceps to me at the end of the semester.

 

Units  4

Prerequisites  Biol 3 (Cell biology) or equivalent; Phys 2A, B or equivalent; Chem 135 or equivalent; Biol 100W or equivalent; permission of instructor

           

Attendance

      Attendance is required during scheduled lecture sections throughout the semester.  As this class is primarily concerned with lab activities, formal lectures will occasionally be substituted by the start of a lab procedure.  Attendance in lab is required during all scheduled sessions.  During sessions designated on the schedule for completion of projects, you may choose your own hours unless notified of required demonstrations, typically each day at the beginning of the laboratory period.  The instructors, however, will be available during each regular lab period for questions and individual help.  The EM lab and prep room will be locked at all times, but I will authorize keys for them.

 

Equipment Reservation

      Reserve lists for the ultramicrotomes, EM, and darkroom(s) will be posted.  Reservations can be made for 2-hour blocks two weeks in advance.  Please try not to miss a reserved session, as others will not be able to plan on the vacancy.  If a reserver is late by 10 minutes, that person forfeits the block to whomever claims it. 

 

Laboratory Policies

      Lab cleanliness and order are necessities in any electron microscopy lab.  The slightest amount of debris will ruin a section.  Please keep the lab and prep room clean, and put all materials in their proper place when you have finished with them.  Walk softly when sectioning, staining, and Formvar coating are being done.  Replenish all photographic chemicals whenever a container is emptied.  Cover all instruments with plastic covers, when applicable.  Return all instruments to their original settings.  Above all, make an effort to get along and be considerate of your classmates.  Equipment (knife maker, ultramicrotomes, EM) may not be used in the absence of an instructor until a checkout has been run.

 

Grading and Assignments

      The laboratory grade will constitute the majority of the course grade with possible lecture exams used to adjust for borderline cases.  The lab grade will be based on individual performance and the final write-up.  The write-up will consist of a minimum of 12 micrographs, legends, and a description of the individual project.  The micrographs must be of publishable quality and fully labeled, including a magnification bar.  The legends must fully explain the micrographs; they should include the organisms, organ, and cell type shown, a description of the content of the micrograph, and the designation for each label in the micrograph.  The project description should be about three pages and should include a description of the structure and function of the organ studied that uses the information in your own micrographs to at least partially illustrate that description.  Under no circumstances will any copying, even of partial sentences, from any source be permitted; lifting phrases, sentences, and paragraphs from the literature is plagiarism and it will be dealt with severely.  The write-up will be judged by the quality of the micrographs, quality of the writing, and the completeness of the descriptions.  Each of the required 12 micrographs must be no smaller than 3 x 4 inches.  The micrographs required are as follows:

 

      1) Mouse (2 organs)                                          5

      2) Negative-Stained Bacterium or Virus             1

      3) Individual Project (1 mouse organ)                 6 (different from any of those in no. 1 above)

 

These are minimum numbers; you may produce as many additional micrographs as you wish.  One micrograph of my choice (preferably one from the individual project) with full legend will be taken for display of course activities at the end of the semester.

 

      University and departmental guidelines require serious and compelling reasons to drop a course.  Grades alone do not constitute reason for dropping a course (see university catalogue).  A lab fee has been charged among your registration fees for this course.  Note that Incompletes are strongly discouraged and will be awarded only with exceedingly good reasons.  They will not be given when any equipment in the EM Facility must be used to complete the project.

 

Individual Project

      Each student must conduct an individual study concentrating on one rodent organ.  Examples of past projects will be available.  The project will be presented orally to the class during Finals’ Week.


Bio 234 Tentative Laboratory Schedule

 

   Date                                                   Topic                                               Reading in B&R

Th, Jan 29      Introduction; Mouse perfusion and primary fixation                         18-21, 24, 25-27

  T, Feb 3       Specimen prep: secondary fixation, dehydration, infiltration             21-23, 24, 34-35

Th, Jan 5        Specimen prep: infiltration, embedment, resin curing                       35-37

  T, Feb 10     Block trimming; knife making                                                         75-78

Th, Feb 12     Knife making; block trimming                                                         82-86, 89

  T, Feb 17     Formvar coating; thick sectioning                                                   90-96

Th, Feb 19     Thick sectioning; Formvar coating                                                  74, 79-82

  T, Feb 24     Ultramicrotomy: thin sectioning                                                       74, 97-109

Th, Feb 26     Ultramicrotomy: thin sectioning

  T, Mar 2       Ultramicrotomy: thin sectioning                                                      

Th, Mar 4       TEM                                                                                             163-201

  T, Mar 9       TEM                                                                                            

Th, Mar 11     TEM                                                                                            

  T, Mar 16     TEM

Th, Mar 18     TEM                                                                                            

  T, Mar 23     TEM: camera use; film processing                                                  243-249       

Th, Mar 25     Section staining                                                                              122-130

M-F, Mar 29-Apr 2      Spring Break

  T, Apr 6       Printing; print mounting and labeling; mag bars                                250-257

Th, Apr 8       Carbon coating; negative staining                                                   130-133, 135-145

  T, Apr 13     Projects

Th, Apr 15     Projects

  T, Apr 20     Projects

Th, Apr 22     Projects

  T, Apr 27     Projects

Th, Apr 29     Projects

  T, May 4      Projects

Th, May 6      Projects

  T, May 11    Projects

Th, May 13    Projects

  T, May 18    Projects; slide making                                                                    257-260

 W, May 26    Oral presentations (0945-1200, DH 249)

 

 

Bio 234 Lecture Topics and Reading List

 

Rodent Handling, Sedation, Dissection, and Perfusion; Specimen Preparation

Resolution and Magnification

      - Introduction 1:4-6

      - Historical Perspective 1:6-9

      - Development of the Electron Microscope 1:9-10

      - Contributions to Biology and the Future of Electron Microscopy 1:12

      - Introduction 6:150-151

      - Equation 6-2: Calculation of Optimal Resolving Power of Light Microscope 6:155

      - Electrons, Waves, and Resolution 6:155-156

      - Magnification 6:162

Fixation

      - Introduction 2:18-19

      - Fixation 2:19-20

      - The Mechanism of Chemical Fixation for Electron Microscopy; Glutaraldehyde 2:20-21

      - Osmium Tetroxide 2:21-22

      - Selection of a Fixative and A Buffer 2:22-23

      - Obtaining and Preparing Buffered Glutaraldehyde Fixative 2:24

      - Obtaining and Preparing Osmium Fixative

      - Fixation Conditions 2:26-27

      - Microwave-Assisted Specimen Preparation 2:27-30

      - Freezing Method for Specimen Preparation 2:30-31

      - Popular Fixation Protocols Other than Glutaraldehyde-Osmium Tetroxide; Karnovsky’s Fixative 2:31

      - Osmium-Reduced Ferrocyanide 2:31-33

      - Potassium Permanganate 2:33

      - Fixative Additives 2:33

      - Embedding Cell Fractions 2:41-42

      - Embedding Tissue Culture Cells 2:43

Fixation Quality

      - Tissue Volume Changes During Specimen Preparation 2:45

      - Judging Adequate Specimen Preparation 2:45-46

      - Fixation Artifacts 19:453-455

      - Interpreting Dynamic Processes from Static Images 19:474

Washing, Prestaining, and Dehydration

      - Washing 2:34

      - Preemebedding, Positive Staining with Uranyl Salts 5:111-112

      - Dehydration 2:34-35

      - Use of Transitional Solvents 2:35

Infiltration and Embedment

     - Infiltration of Resin 2:35-36

      - Embedding 2:36

      - Epon Embedding 2:36

      - Measuring Embedding Media 2:36

      - Mixing Embedding Media 2:36

      - Other Embedments and Their Use 2:36-39

      - Curing of the Embedment 2:39-41

Sectioning and Staining Quality

      - Introduction 5:122

      - Positive Staining 5:122-123

      - Preembedding, Positive Staining Uranyl Salts 5:123-124

      - Postembedding Staining with Uranyl Salts 5:124-126

      - Postembedding Lead Staining 5:127-129

      - Microwave Staining 5:129

      - Staining Many Grids 5:129-130

      - Dehydration, Infiltration, and Embedding Artifacts 19:455-456

      - Sectioning Artifacts 19:456-464

      - Staining Artifacts 19:464-466

Optics and Diffraction

      - Visible Light, Electrons, and Lenses, Electromagnetic Radiation and the Diffraction Phenomenon 6:151-153

      - Effect of Diffraction on Resolution 6:153-155

Lens Aberrations

      - Defects in Lenses 6:158-161

      - Apertures in Objective Lens 6:176-177

      - Equation 6.8: Depth of Field 6:177          

      - Equation 6.9: Depth of Focus 6:179

Electromagnetic Lenses

      - General Design of Lenses 6:156-157

      - Design of Electromagnetic Lenses 6:157-158

TEM Column

      - Comparison of Light Microscope to Transmission Electron Microscope 6:163

      - Basic Systems Making Up a Transmission Electron Microscope 6:163-164

      - Illuminating System 6:164

      - Electron Gun 6:164-171

      - Condenser Lenses 6:171-173

      - Specimen Manipulation System 6:173-175

      - Imaging System 6:175

      - Objective Lens 6:175-178

      - Intermediate (Diffraction) Lens 6:178-179

      - Projector Lens 6:179

      - Viewing System and Camera 6:179-180

      - Alignment Theory 6:170-173

      - Major Operational Modes of the Transmission Electron Microscope 6:192

      - High Contrast 6:192-193

      - High Resolution 6:193-194

      - Electrical Stability 6:196  

      - Image Drift 6:196

      - Contamination 6:197

      - Magnification 6:197

      - Magnification Calibration 6:197-198

Microscope and Photographic Mishaps

      - Introduction to Viewing Biological Electron Micrographs 19:444-446

      - Interpretation of Normal Tissue Structure 19:446

      - Magnification and Resolution 19:446-447

      - Membranes 19:447-448

      - Shape, Kinds, and Number of Structures 19:448-453

      - Microscope Artifacts 19:466-473

      - Photographic Artifacts 19:473

Vacuum Systems

      - Vacuum System 6:180

      - Vacuum Terminology 6:180-181

      - Rotary and Diffusion Pumps 6:181-184

      - Reading Vacuum Levels 6:184

      - Total Vacuum Systems 6:185

      - Vacuum Problems and Safety Features 6:185-187

      - Other Types of Vacuum Pumps (Ion pumps) 6:187-188

Ultrastructure of the Cell Surface

      - The Cell Surface 20:480

      - The Lipid Bilayer of the Plasmalemma 20:480-482

      - The Glycocalyx 20:482

      - Cell Junctions 20:483488

      - Cell Surface Specializations 20:488-505

      - Collagen 20:571-574

      - Basal Lamina 20:575

      - The Cell Wall 20:583-584

Endoplasmic Reticulum and Golgi Apparatus

      - Free Ribosomes 20:535

      - Membrane-Bound Ribosomes 20:535

      - Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum 20:535-537

      - Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum 20:537-538

      - The Golgi Apparatus 20:538-542

Lysosomes and Peroxisomes

      - The Lysosomal System 20:556-558

      - Multivesicular Bodies 20:558-562

      - Peroxisomes or Microbodies 20:563-

Mitochondria

      - Mitochondria 20:528-534

Cytoplasmic Inclusions

      - Secretory Products 20:542-548

      - Glycogen 20:564-567

      - Lipid 20:568

      - Crystalloids 20:568-571

Cytoskeletal Elements

      - The Cytoskeleton 20:506

      - Microtubules 20:506-509

      - Microfilaments 20:509-510

      - Intermediate Filaments 20:510-512

      - Centrioles 20:549-551

      - Cilia and Flagella 20:551-555

Nuclei.

      - The Nucleus 20:513

      - The Nuclear Envelope and Nuclear Lamina 20:514-515

      - Chromatin 20:515-518

      - The Nucleolus 20:518

      - Dividing Animal Cells 20:518-521

      - Cells without Nuclei 20:521

      - The Synaptonemal Complex 20:521-527

Immunocytochemistry

      - Cryoultramicrotomy 4:109-117

      - Chapter 9 (Immunocytochemistry), pp. 262-280

Autoradiography

      - Chapter 11 (Autoradiography; Radioautography), pp. 292-308

Localization Techniques

      - Chapter 10 (Enzyme Cytochemistry), pp. 282-291

      - Chapter 12 (Miscellaneous Localization and Enhancement Techniques), pp. 310-318

      - Chapter 17 (Tracers), pp. 407-413

Additional Methods

      - Negative Staining 5:130-134

      - Metal Shadowing Techniques 5:135

      - Metal Evaporation Procedures 5:136-140

      - Some Applications of Metal Shadowing and Negative Staining 5:140-145

      - Chapter 15 (The Analytical Electron Microscope), pp. 368-395

      - Chapter 16 (Intermediate and High Voltage Microscopy), pp. 396-405

      - Chapter 13 (Quantitative Electron Microcroscopy), pp. 320-340