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Down the Resolution Road: Freeze-Fracture Revisited?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

Stephen W. Carmichael*
Affiliation:
Mayo Clinic

Extract

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It must have seemed rather fantastic back in the fifties, when Russell Steere froze chunks of plant viruses (tobacco mosaic virus, tobacco nngspot virus, and squash mosaic virus) in drops of water, planed them freehand with a scalpel blade, made a replica of the surface, and examined the replica in a transmission electron microscope. But that was the birth of freeze-fracture and freeze-etch methodology that yielded enormous amounts of information about the morphology of membranes.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 1995

References

2. Steere, R.L., Electron microscopy of structural detail in frozen biological specimens, J. Biophys. Biochem. Cytol, 3:4560, 1957.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

3. Yamamoto, A. and Tashiro, Y., Visualization by an atomic force microscope of the surface of ultra-thin sections of rat kidney and liver cells embedded in LR White. J. Histochem. Cytochem. 42:14631470, 1994.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed