Biological studies have relied on two complementary microscope technologies - light (fluorescence) microscopy and electron microscopy. Light microscopy is used to study phenomena at a global scale to look for unique or rare events, and it also provides an opportunity for live imaging, whereas the forte of electron microscopy is the high resolution. Traditionally light and electron microscopy observations are carried out in different populations of cells/tissues and a 'correlative' inference is drawn. The advent of true correlative light-electron microscopy has allowed high-resolution imaging by electron microscopy of the same structure observed by light microscopy, and in advanced cases by video microscopy. Thus a rare event captured by low-resolution imaging of a population or transient events captured by live imaging can now also be studied at high resolution by electron microscopy. Here, the potential and difficulties of this approach, along with the most impressive breakthroughs obtained by these methods, are discussed. © 2009 The Royal Microscopical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Mironov, A. A., & Beznoussenko, G. V. (2009). Correlative microscopy: A potent tool for the study of rare or unique cellular and tissue events. Journal of Microscopy. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2818.2009.03222.x
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