Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/microscopy

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Cryofixation

Specimen preparation process


Summary

Specimen preparation process

Cryofixation is a technique for fixation or stabilisation of biological materials as the first step in specimen preparation for the electron microscopy and cryo-electron microscopy. Typical specimens for cryofixation include small samples of plant or animal tissue, cell suspensions of microorganisms or cultured cells, suspensions of viruses or virus capsids and samples of purified macromolecules, especially proteins.

Types of cryo-fixation are freezing-drying, freezing-substitution and freezing-etching.

Plunge freezing

The method involves ultra-rapid cooling of small tissue or cell samples to the temperature of liquid nitrogen (−196 °C) or below, stopping all motion and metabolic activity and preserving the internal structure by freezing all fluid phases solid. Typically, a sample is plunged into liquid nitrogen or into liquid ethane or liquid propane in a container cooled by liquid nitrogen. The ultimate objective is to freeze the specimen so rapidly (at 104 to 106 K per second) that ice crystals are unable to form, or are prevented from growing big enough to cause damage to the specimen's ultrastructure. The formation of samples containing specimens in amorphous ice is the "holy grail" of biological cryomicroscopy.

In practice, it is very difficult to achieve high enough cooling rates to produce amorphous ice in specimens more than a few micrometres in thickness. For this purpose, plunging a specimen into liquid nitrogen at its boiling point (−196 °C) does not always freeze the specimen fast enough, for several reasons. First, the liquid nitrogen boils rapidly around the specimen forming a film of insulating gas that slows heat transfer to the cryogenic liquid, known as the Leidenfrost effect. Cooling rates can be improved by pumping the liquid nitrogen with a rotary vane vacuum pump for a few tens of seconds before plunging the specimen into it. This lowers the temperature of the liquid nitrogen below its boiling point, so that when the specimen is plunged into it, it envelops the specimen closely for a brief period of time and extracts heat from it more efficiently. Even faster cooling can be obtained by plunging specimens into liquid propane or ethane (ethane has been found to be more efficient) cooled very close to their melting points using liquid nitrogen or by slamming the specimen against highly polished liquid nitrogen-cooled metal surfaces made of copper or silver. Secondly, two properties of water itself prevent rapid cryofixation in large specimens. The thermal conductivity of ice is very low compared with that of metals, and water releases of latent heat of fusion as it freezes, defeating rapid cooldown in specimens more than a few micrometres thick.

High-pressure freezing

High pressure helps prevent the formation of large ice crystals. Self pressurized rapid freezing (SPRF) can utilize many different cryogens has recently been touted as an attractive and low cost alternative to high pressure freezing (HPF). Cold pressurized nitrogen substitutes ethanol at temperatures roughly 123K. The warm ethanol is then expelled by the freezing LN2 and most likely produces an ethanol-nitrogen mixture that gradually becomes colder and colder.

Freeze-drying

Drying times are reduced by up to 30% with proper freeze drying.

References

References

  1. (2010). "Bacterial TEM".
  2. Echlin P. (1992). "Low Temperature Microscopy and Analysis". Plenum Publishing Corporation.
  3. (1988). "Cryo-electron microscopy of vitrified specimens". Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics.
  4. (1994). "Vitrification of aqueous suspensions from a controlled environment for electron microsocopy: an improved plunge-cooling device". Journal of Microscopy.
  5. Ryan, Keith P.. (1992). "Cryofixation of tissues for electron microscopy: a review of plunge cooling methods.". Scan. Microsc..
  6. Bald WB. (1984). "The relative efficiency of cryogenic fluids used in the rapid quench-cooling of cryogenic samples". Journal of Microscopy.
  7. (1987). "The construction and operation of a simple and inexpensive slam freezing device for electron microscopy". Journal of Microscopy.
  8. Bald WB. (1987). "Quantitative Cryofixation". Adam Hilger.
  9. Leunissen Jan L.M. and Yi H.. (2009). "Self-pressurized rapid freezing (SPRF): a novel cryofixation method for specimen preparation in electron microscopy". J. Microsc..
  10. Studer, D. (September 1995). "Vitrification of articular cartilage by high-pressure freezing". Journal of Microscopy.
  11. (2019-10-01). "Vacuum Freezing of Coffee Extract Under Different Process Conditions". Food and Bioprocess Technology.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Cryofixation — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report