Abstract
Although microscopes and image-analysis software for electron cryomicroscopy (cryo-EM) have improved dramatically in recent years, specimen-preparation methods have lagged behind. Most strategies still rely on blotting microscope grids with paper to produce a thin film of solution suitable for vitrification. This approach loses more than 99.9% of the applied sample and requires several seconds, leading to problematic air-water interface interactions for macromolecules in the resulting thin film of solution and complicating time-resolved studies. Recently developed self-wicking EM grids allow the use of small volumes of sample, with nanowires on the grid bars removing excess solution to produce a thin film within tens of milliseconds from sample application to freezing. Here, a simple cryo-EM specimen-preparation device that uses components from an ultrasonic humidifier to transfer protein solution onto a self-wicking EM grid is presented. The device is controlled by a Raspberry Pi single-board computer and all components are either widely available or can be manufactured by online services, allowing the device to be constructed in laboratories that specialize in cryo-EM rather than instrument design. The simple open-source design permits the straightforward customization of the instrument for specialized experiments.
Author supplied keywords
- 3D printing
- CNC milling Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grant John L. Rubinstein Ontario Graduate Scholarship Canadian Institutes of Health Research
- Institute of Genetics Doctoral Research Award Zev A. Ripstein Hospital for Sick Children ResTraComp fellowship Justin M. Di Trani Canada Research Chairs Canada Foundation for Innovation
- Raspberry Pi
- cryo-EM
- self-wicking grids
- specimen preparation
- ultrasonic
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Rubinstein, J. L., Guo, H., Ripstein, Z. A., Haydaroglu, A., Au, A., Yip, C. M., … Kwoka, T. (2019). Shake-it-off: A simple ultrasonic cryo-EM specimen-preparation device Rubinstein John L. Acta Crystallographica Section D: Structural Biology, 75, 1063–1070. https://doi.org/10.1107/S2059798319014372
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