Fib-sem as a volume electron microscopy approach to study cellular architectures in sars-cov-2 and other viral infections: A practical primer for a virologist

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Abstract

The visualization of cellular ultrastructure over a wide range of volumes is becoming possi-ble by increasingly powerful techniques grouped under the rubric “volume electron microscopy” or volume EM (vEM). Focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM) occupies a “Goldilocks zone” in vEM: iterative and automated cycles of milling and imaging allow the interrogation of microns-thick specimens in 3-D at resolutions of tens of nanometers or less. This bestows on FIB-SEM the unique ability to aid the accurate and precise study of architectures of virus-cell interactions. Here we give the virologist or cell biologist a primer on FIB-SEM imaging in the context of vEM and discuss practical aspects of a room temperature FIB-SEM experiment. In an in vitro study of SARS-CoV-2 infection, we show that accurate quantitation of viral densities and surface curvatures enabled by FIB-SEM imaging reveals SARS-CoV-2 viruses preferentially located at areas of plasma membrane that have positive mean curvatures.

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APA

Baena, V., Conrad, R., Friday, P., Fitzgerald, E., Kim, T., Bernbaum, J., … Narayan, K. (2021, April 1). Fib-sem as a volume electron microscopy approach to study cellular architectures in sars-cov-2 and other viral infections: A practical primer for a virologist. Viruses. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/v13040611

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