There have been many recent technological advances in cryo-EM, including advancements in the microscope hardware itself that improve the overall quality of the images, and also developments in software that are used to process the cryo-EM images that can start to deal with the large amounts of heterogeneity present in many of the samples. The sample preparation remains one of the largest bottlenecks in cryo-EM. The sample quantity may be limiting and proteins tend to absorb to the hydrophobic air-water interface during vitrification.
This can lead to sample denaturation, the breaking apart of larger protein complexes and preferred particle orientations that are present in the cryo-EM images. These grids take advantage of the high-affinity interaction between streptavidin and biotin to tether biotinylated samples and protect them from the hydrophobic air-water interface. We can work with very low sample amounts, and random biotin elation of samples offers a strategy to overcome preferential orientation issues that may be observed when using other support layers.