Electron microscopic imaging of integrin

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Abstract

Rotary-shadowed samples often used for electron microscopy do not preserve native integrin conformations. Negatively stained integrins - or, more desirably, unstained integrins in a cryo-condition - are now being used with sophisticated imaging techniques. Additionally, a single-particle analysis (SPA) of integrins is advanced by the recent determination of several crystal structures of integrins. Nevertheless the conformational flexibility of integrins limits the ability of SPA to image physiologic conformations. To solve this problem, we apply electron tomography to purified integrin, thereby obtaining high-quality three-dimensional (3-D) images that fit well to the atomic structures. We have also taken typical SPA approaches to obtain a 3-D reconstruction of integrin, using conditions that favor the bent conformation. © 2011 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.

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APA

Iwasaki, K. (2011). Electron microscopic imaging of integrin. Methods in Molecular Biology, 757, 111–128. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-61779-166-6_9

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