A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content. Sign in or start your free trial.
Method Article
This paper describes the application of cryoanalytical electron microscopy to the quantitative measurement of total calcium content and distribution at subcellular resolution in physiologically defined biological specimens.
In this article the tools, techniques, and instruments appropriate for quantitative measurements of intracellular elemental content using the technique known as electron probe microanalysis (EPMA) are described. Intramitochondrial calcium is a particular focus because of the critical role that mitochondrial calcium overload plays in neurodegenerative diseases. The method is based on the analysis of X-rays generated in an electron microscope (EM) by interaction of an electron beam with the specimen. In order to maintain the native distribution of diffusible elements in electron microscopy specimens, EPMA requires "cryofixation" of tissue followed by the preparation of ultrathin cryosections. Rapid freezing of cultured cells or organotypic slice cultures is carried out by plunge freezing in liquid ethane or by slam freezing against a cold metal block, respectively. Cryosections nominally 80 nm thick are cut dry with a diamond knife at ca. -160 °C, mounted on carbon/pioloform-coated copper grids, and cryotransferred into a cryo-EM using a specialized cryospecimen holder. After visual survey and location mapping at ≤-160 °C and low electron dose, frozen-hydrated cryosections are freeze-dried at -100 °C for ~30 min. Organelle-level images of dried cryosections are recorded, also at low dose, by means of a slow-scan CCD camera and subcellular regions of interest selected for analysis. X-rays emitted from ROIs by a stationary, focused, high-intensity electron probe are collected by an energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectrometer, processed by associated electronics, and presented as an X-ray spectrum, that is, a plot of X-ray intensity vs. energy. Additional software facilitates: 1) identification of elemental components by their "characteristic" peak energies and fingerprint; and 2) quantitative analysis by extraction of peak areas/background. This paper concludes with two examples that illustrate typical EPMA applications, one in which mitochondrial calcium analysis provided critical insight into mechanisms of excitotoxic injury and another that revealed the basis of ischemia resistance.
Calcium ions are arguably the most important and versatile cell signaling entity in biology, playing an essential role in normal processes as diverse as synaptic transmission and gene expression. On the other hand, calcium is equally important in cell death. In particular, calcium deregulation is a key factor in neuronal injury in stroke, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and other neurodegenerative diseases3,5. Thus, it is critically important to understand quantitatively how calcium is distributed within cells, and how this changes following physiological or pathophysiological stimuli. This goal is complicated by the fact that calcium is dynamically distributed between two physical states - free in solution or bound to a substrate - and that cellular calcium concentrations change over several orders of magnitude as a consequence of stimulation.
While there are several advanced methodologies available for the analysis of free intracellular calcium, the determination of total calcium concentrations in defined intracellular compartments is realistically limited to one approach, namely, electron probe microanalysis (EPMA). EPMA is a technique that couples an X-ray spectrometer to a transmission electron microscope (TEM). The TEM electron gun focuses a stationary, submicron electron probe on a subcellular region of interest and the element-specific X-rays emitted as a result of electron bombardment are collected and analyzed (see references7,4 for detailed technical reviews). Advantages of EPMA include single organelle-level resolution and submillimolar sensitivity. In practice, however, EPMA requires specialized cryotechniques and instrumentation for specimen preparation and analysis. Here, the tools, techniques and instruments appropriate for measurements of intracellular calcium using EPMA are described. Intramitochondrial calcium is of special interest on account of the critical role that mitochondrial calcium overload plays in neurodegenerative diseases.
Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.
The approach described here was developed using specific instruments, tools and software. Because labs will not be using the same experimental setup the approach is generalized where possible.
1. Rapid Freezing
The analytical method to be described is absolutely dependent on cryogenic approaches for: 1) the "cryofixation" of cells or tissues in a manner that quantitatively preserves the distribution of diffusible tissue components and chemical elements as they were in live cells at the instant of freezing; and 2) the preparation of ultrathin cryosections suitable for imaging and analysis in a TEM. These techniques are briefly described here, but details necessary to reproduce these procedures in other laboratories are beyond the scope of this article. Interested readers are referred to excellent recent articles9,14.
Caution: This section describes the use of liquefied ethane, which is highly flammable and potentially explosive; appropriate precautions should be taken. Operator must also be familiar with liquid nitrogen (LN2) safety precautions, including protective lab coat, glasses, and cryoresistant gloves. Note: Here and throughout, all tools (forceps, etc.) used to handle frozen specimens must be precooled in LN2 before use to avoid accidental thawing.
Cultured cells on coverslips
Rapid freezing of cultured brain slices
2. Cryosectioning
CAVEAT: Successfully producing dry-cut ribbons of ultrathin sections, while straightforward and logical, requires training, patience and considerable practice.
3. Cryotransfer of Specimens to the Electron Microscope
The core instrument for EPMA in this laboratory is an analytical electron microscope operated at 120 kV and equipped for cryomicroscopy, that is, designed with a clean vacuum, specimen-area anticontaminator, a 2k x 2k high-sensitivity digital camera and cryotransfer specimen holder. Check beforehand microscope alignment and operating conditions in both low- and high-magnification modes and confirm a satisfactory column vacuum, ideally ≤10-7 Torr. Tune up as necessary.
4. Visual Survey of Sections
5. Freeze-drying of Sections
6. Imaging of Cells and Organelles
Structural images of freeze-dried sections are obtained at ca. -160 °C as low-dose, zero-loss images recorded digitally using a 2k x 2k slow-scan CCD camera controlled by appropriate software.
7. Acquisition of X-ray Spectra
X-ray spectra can be recorded using any of several commercial or custom-designed X-ray analysis systems minimally consisting of an energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX) detector, associated pulse-processor electronics and compatible acquisition and display software. (The system used in this lab is described in Table 1.)
8. Analysis of X-ray Spectra
Qualitative analysis
An EDX spectrum (Figure 2, inset) is essentially an x-y plot of the X-ray intensity vs. energy. Spectra contain qualitative and quantitative information about the elemental composition of the analyzed volume, in that the "characteristic" energy of a peak identifies the element giving rise to that peak while the intensity reflects the amount of that element. The characteristic peaks ride on top of a slowly varying background, the "continuum". (The legend to Figure 2 further discusses salient details of EDX spectra.) The energy of the peak manifolds for the entire periodic table are defined by the well known electronic structure of elements, thus all EDX software links to a database that automatically identifies components of an analyte. In a physiological context, elements of general interest that are well suited to EDX analysis include Na (Kα at 1.04 keV), P (2.01 keV), K (3.31 keV), and Ca (3.69 keV).
Quantitative analysis
Quantitative analysis of EDX spectra consists of extracting the integrated area of identified peaks and converting this value to a concentration. For biological analysis, the established approach is the Hall peak/continuum method4,7,10, which takes advantage of the fact that the intensity of the continuum (defined above and in Figure 2) is proportional to the dry mass of the analyzed volume. Thus, the ratio of peak area/continuum area, when compared to the same ratio in spectra of standards of known composition, specifies the concentration in the targeted cellular compartment. Note that this approach provides concentrations in units of moles per weight, typically expressed as mmol/kg dry weight. This unit is unusual and for interpretation may require additional conversion to, for example, mmol/L wet weight or mmol/mg protein, as described elsewhere4,10.
Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.
Brain cells typically sustain excitotoxic injury as a result of the pathological neurotransmitter release that occurs under ischemic conditions. EPMA was critical to discovering how the ability of neuronal mitochondria to sequester massive amounts of calcium underlies the mechanism of injury. The electron micrograph in Figure 3 illustrates the appearance of mitochondria in freeze-dried cryosections of cultured hippocampal neurons rapidly frozen after 30 min exposure to an excitotoxic stimulus (100 μ...
Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.
The electron microscope-based analytical method presented here allows for the detection, identification, and quantitation of several elements of biological interest, including Na, K, P, and especially Ca. These analyses can be carried out at subcellular, i.e., intra-organelle, resolution owing to the ability to locate and identify structures of interest in high-quality images of cryosections prepared from rapidly frozen specimens. Note that no staining is required to record electron images comparable in structur...
Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.
The authors report no conflicts of interest.
We would like to thank Ms. Christine A. Winters for excellent technical assistance. This work was supported by the Basic Neuroscience Program of the NINDS Intramural Research Program, NIH (Z01 NS002610).
Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
REAGENTS/MATERIALS | |||
Thermanox plastic coverslips | Thermo Fischer Scientific | 72280 | |
Culture inserts | BD Falcon | 353090 | For 6-well plates |
Cryopins | Leica Microsystems | 16701952 | Grooved |
Wood applicators | EM Sciences | 72300 | |
Folding EM grids | Ted Pella | 4GC100/100 | 100 mesh |
Indium foil | Alfa Aesar | 13982 | 0.25 mm thick |
EQUIPMENT | |||
Plunge freezing device | Leica Microsystems | KF-80 | |
Slam freezing device | LifeCell | CF-100 | |
Ultramicrotome | Leica Microsystems | UC6 | |
Cryoattachment for microtome | Leica Microsystems | FC6 | |
Diamond cryotrimming tool | Diatome | Cryotrim 45 | |
Diamond cryoknife | Diatome | Cryo 35 | |
Antistatic device | Diatome | Hauf Static Line | |
Cryo electron microscope | Carl Zeiss Microscopy | EM912 Omega | |
EM cryo specimen holder | Gatan | CT3500 | |
Slow-scan CCD camera, 2k x 2k | Troendle (TRS) | Sharpeye | |
Image acquisition software | Olympus SIS | iTEM suite | |
ED x-ray detector | Oxford Instruments | Linksystem Pentafet | |
Pulse Processor | Oxford Instruments | XP-3 | |
PCI backplane card | 4pi Systems | Spectral Engine II | |
Desktop computer | Apple | Any OS9-compatible model | |
X-ray analysis software | NIST | DTSA, DTSA II | |
Spreadsheet software | Microsoft | Excel | |
|
Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.
Request permission to reuse the text or figures of this JoVE article
Request PermissionThis article has been published
Video Coming Soon
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved