Hollow cone electron imaging for single particle 3D reconstruction of proteins

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Abstract

The main bottlenecks for high-resolution biological imaging in electron microscopy are radiation sensitivity and low contrast. The phase contrast at low spatial frequencies can be enhanced by using a large defocus but this strongly reduces the resolution. Recently, phase plates have been developed to enhance the contrast at small defocus but electrical charging remains a problem. Single particle cryo-electron microscopy is mostly used to minimize the radiation damage and to enhance the resolution of the 3D reconstructions but it requires averaging images of a massive number of individual particles. Here we present a new route to achieve the same goals by hollow cone dark field imaging using thermal diffuse scattered electrons giving about a 4 times contrast increase as compared to bright field imaging. We demonstrate the 3D reconstruction of a stained GroEL particle can yield about 13.5 Å resolution but using a strongly reduced number of images.

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Tsai, C. Y., Chang, Y. C., Lobato, I., Van Dyck, D., & Chen, F. R. (2016). Hollow cone electron imaging for single particle 3D reconstruction of proteins. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep27701

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