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Capsule-Based Processing and Handling of Electron Microscopy Specimens and Grids

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2015

Steven L. Goodman*
Affiliation:
Microscopy Innovations LLC, 213 Air Park Road, Suite 101, Marshfield, WI 54449
Kristy D. Wendt
Affiliation:
Microscopy Innovations LLC, 213 Air Park Road, Suite 101, Marshfield, WI 54449 Laboratory for Optical and Computational Instrumentation, University of Wisconsin, 1675 Observatory Drive, Madison, WI, 53706
Michael S. Kostrna
Affiliation:
Electron Microscopy Training Program, Madison College. 1701 Wright Street, Madison, WI 53704
Craig Radi
Affiliation:
Wisconsin Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, 445 Easterday Lane, Madison, WI 53706

Abstract

Type
Biological Electron Microscopy
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 2015 

Introduction

It is a testament to the brilliance of the earliest biological electron microscopists that half a century later, most cell and tissue specimens for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) are still prepared using chemical fixation, polymer embedding, microtomy, and heavy-metal staining protocols based on those developed by Palade, Porter, Fullam, Claude, and others in the 1950s–1970s [Reference Palade1Reference Palade5]. These methods remain in use today because they provide good fixation and electron contrast, and they enable thin sectioning. To perform these protocols, biological specimens are placed into vials filled with each chemical reagent, followed by manually exchanging reagents using transfer pipettes. Similarly, grids are stained by manually moving them between reagent droplets or dishes. However, why these fluid-handling methods have remained largely unchanged in the modern electron microscopy lab is surprising because fluid handing in life science laboratories was transformed during the same decades as TEM revolutionized biology. Two leading advancements in fluid handling were the introduction of the variable-volume pipetter by Gilson [Reference Gilson and Gilson6] in 1972 and the mass-produced micro-well plate (microtiter plate) invented by Cooke [Reference Cooke and Hall7Reference Manns8] and commercialized about 1966 [Reference Manns9].

The importance of fluid handling in electron microscopy is considerable. Typical TEM specimen preparation protocols comprise 20 or more fixative, rinse, dehydrant, and resin exchanges. Thus, the process of preparing only 5 different tissue samples entails over 200 discrete vial-filling and emptying steps. Not only is this tedious, but specimens can be damaged by contact with the container, by being accidentally aspirated into transfer pipettes, by air exposure when specimens float or stick to the vial sides, and when transfers between reagents take too long. Specimens may even be lost because many tissues are difficult to see when immersed or when they stick to the sides of vials. It is also difficult to maintain consistent timing when several specimens are being prepared, thus reducing experimental reproducibility. Although automatic tissue processers ease this tedium and equalize reagent timing, most such devices require cumbersome manual specimen transfers from porous baskets into embedding molds. More importantly, automatic processors are not able to simultaneously prepare a group of specimens with different staining and fixation protocols as commonly required in research.

Manual processing can be wasteful of reagent because common lab vessels (scintillation vials, microfuge tubes) require at least 1–2 ml of reagent simply to keep specimens immersed, yet only 7–10 times the volume of a specimen is sufficient for each reagent step [Reference Bozzola and Russell10]. Given that biological tissue TEM specimens are typically 1 mm3, specimen volume is thus about 1 μl, and therefore only 7–10 μl of reagent is actually required. Thus, reagent volumes consumed in vial processing easily exceed 100 times that required for sufficient reaction.

For most labs the process for staining sections on grids with heavy metals (or immuno-labels) has also not changed [Reference Reynolds11Reference Bozzola and Russell12]. Grids are extensively handled using forceps to transfer them into and out of grid boxes, onto and between stain droplets or other staining apparatuses, back into grid boxes, and eventually onto the TEM stage. Because grids are fragile, it is challenging to not damage, drop, or lose them. Also, because individual grids are not labeled, they can easily be mixed up. It is also difficult to obtain identical timing when multiple grids are being prepared, thus reducing experimental reproducibility.

This article describes a new capsule-based processing system for preparing and handling EM specimens and TEM grids. It is based on two types of microliter-volume, purpose-built vessels called mPrep™ capsules. Each mPrep/s capsule (micro-Preparation for specimens) entraps an individual specimen, while each mPrep/g capsule (micro-Preparation for grids) holds one or two TEM grids. Both mPrep capsule types connect to standard and widely used adjustable-volume laboratory pipettors in the same manner as pipette tips. This provides for efficient delivery of reagents directly to the specimens or grids entrapped in the capsules. Once a specimen or grid is inserted into an mPrep capsule, it may never require removal except to place grids into the microscope. This capsule system eliminates almost all specimen and grid handling, greatly reducing the potential for damage, loss, or misidentification because each capsule is readily labeled.

Materials and Methods

Several mammalian and one plant specimen were prepared and examined. Tissues from laboratory rats (Rattus norvegicus), Yucatan mini-pigs, and Dieffenbachia (dumb cane) plant tissue were prepared using mPrep/s specimen capsule processing followed by section staining on grids using mPrep/g capsules. Sections of vampire bat brain (Desmondontidae) were stained using mPrep/g capsule processing from specimens provided after fixation and embedding using conventional methods.

Specimen processing

Rat and pig tissues were prepared from fresh specimens provided from other research investigations. Rat kidney was perfusion fixed, excised, immersed in Karnovsky’s fixative [Reference Karnovsky13], and then refrigerated until subsequently it was fully processed. Pig heart and skin samples were rapidly excised after euthanasia, immediately immersed in Karnovsky’s fixative, and refrigerated until subsequently processed. Tissue specimens were then cut into 1 mm3 pieces suitable for TEM preparation and entrapped into mPrep/s capsules between the 300 μm pores molded into the capsule bottom and the removable screen, which also has 300 μm pores (Figure 1a). The capsules were then attached to a 12-channel Gilson Neo P12X200N Pipetman (Figure 1b) via mPrep/f filter couplers, which prevent accidental drawing of reagents into the pipettor. To identify each specimen, adhesive labels were attached to each capsule. The labels used in this study (provided with mPrep capsules) included both a computer-readable 2D (datamatrix) barcode and human-readable alphanumeric characters.

Figure 1 Tissue processing using mPrep/s capsules: (a) Empty mPrep/s capsule. The arrow indicates the location for entrapping specimens between the capsule bottom with 300 μm pores, and the removable, adjustable 300 μm pore screen. For clarity no specimen is shown. The tool to insert and remove the screen is not shown. (b) Twelve labeled mPrep/s capsules [s] attached to a 12-channel Pipetman held above the reagent reservoir. Each mPrep/s capsule contains a ~1 mm3 specimen and 100 μl reagent (en bloc uranyl acetate). Capsules are connected to the pipettor via an mPrep/f filter coupler [f]. (c) Twelve mPrep/s capsules filled with epoxy and inserted into the mPrep/bench just prior to ejection from the pipettor. (d) mPrep/s capsule clamped into a microtome chuck with the capsule trimmed away to expose the epoxy-embedded tissue. The arrow shows the faced epoxy block ready for sectioning.

Tissue was processed by simultaneously aspirating 100 μl of each reagent from polyethylene reservoirs (troughs) into all capsules. The pipettor was held upright with the capsules resting in the reservoir for the designated reaction time using a lab stand. The reagent sequence was:

  1. 1. Fresh Karnovsky’s fixative for 1 hr (to ensure full fixation after tissue cutting)

  2. 2. 3 × 5 min washes in Sorensen’s sodium phosphate buffer

  3. 3. 1% OsO4 (wt/vol) in Sorensen’s sodium phosphate buffer for 1 hr

  4. 4. 3 × 10 min washes in deionized water

  5. 5. 1% (wt/vol) aqueous uranyl acetate for 1 hr

  6. 6. 3 × 10 min washes in deionized water

  7. 7. 1 each 15 min washes of 20%, 50%, 70%, and 90% acetone in deionized water

  8. 8. 3 × 20 min washes in 100% acetone

  9. 9. 1:2 Epon/Spurr’s [Reference Wendt14] : acetone infiltration for 1 hr

  10. 10. 1:1 Epon/Spurr’s : acetone infiltration for 1 hr

  11. 11. 2:1 Epon/Spurr’s : acetone infiltration for 1 hr

  12. 12. 100% Epon/Spurr’s resin infiltration for 12 hrs at room temperature

  13. 13. 100% Epon/Spurr’s resin

After the final fill with resin, mPrep/s capsules were inserted into an mPrep/bench as shown in Figure 1c, and, without dispensing the resin, the filled capsules were ejected from the pipettor. The mPrep/bench is a silicone 96-well plate that tightly fits the mPrep/s (and mPrep/g) capsule bottoms to keep fluid retained in the capsules. The mPrep/f couplers were then removed, and additional resin was added using a transfer pipette to fill the mPrep/s capsules to the top. The mPrep/bench with resin-filled capsules was then transferred to a 60°C oven for ~12 hr in-capsule polymerization. The Dieffenbachia plant tissue was prepared similarly except that 2% aqueous OsO4 was used for secondary fixation, and the resin was Epon 812 (50% Epon 812, 20% DDSA, 20%NMA/MNA, 10% DBP with 2.5% DMP-10 accelerator).

Sectioning

The mPrep/s capsules with polymerized epoxy blocks inside were directly clamped in the microtome chuck of a Leica U7 ultramicrotome. The block was trimmed and faced for microtomy in the standard way after first trimming away the end of the mPrep/s capsule (Figure 1d). Thick and thin sections were then cut using a diamond knife.

For light microscopy, 0.5 μm kidney sections were cut and collected on glass slides, stained with poly‑chrome I (methylene blue, azure II, 10% methanol, 10% glycerol), and examined with an Olympus BH2 microscope equipped with a Nikon 700 DSLR camera. For TEM, 70 nm sections were collected on 200-mesh Cu grids. One or two grids were then inserted and stored in labeled mPrep/g capsules (Figure 2a), and the capsules in turn were stored in an mPrep capsule grid box (not shown) until staining.

Figure 2 TEM grid staining using mPrep/g capsules: (a) mPrep/g capsule with two copper grids inserted. Forceps tips are visible to right. (b) mPrep/g capsule with grids filled with uranyl acetate stain [g] attached to a single-channel pipettor via an mPrep/f coupler [f]. (c) Eight labeled mPrep/g capsules containing a total of 16 grids attached to an 8-channel Pipetman via mPrep/f couplers. Capsules are above a reagent reservoir filled with uranyl acetate stain.

Grid staining and TEM examination

Grid-containing mPrep/g capsules were connected via mPrep/f couplers to a single-channel pipettor (Figure 2b) or to an 8-channel Gilson Neo P8X200N Pipetman (Figure 2c). With the 8-channel pipettor, 16 grids were simultaneously stained by aspirating 35 μl of reagent into each mPrep/g capsule from a reagent reservoir (Figure 2c), following this protocol:

  1. 1. 2.5% (wt/vol) uranyl acetate in 50% ethanol for 14 min in the dark

  2. 2. Deionized water rinses: 24 rapid aspiration and dispense rinses (~2 seconds/cycle) were done with fresh water, with the water replaced after every 8 rinses.

  3. 3. Reynold’s lead citrate [Reference Reynolds11] for 9 min. Note that because grids were inside mPrep capsules, no hydroxide (NaOH) pellets were used, as commonly practiced with droplet staining to reduce carbon dioxide exposure that can lead to lead precipitates [Reference Bozzola and Russell12].

  4. 4. Rinses with deionized water as above

  5. 5. The mPrep/g capsules were removed from the pipettor after dispensing the final rinse water.

  6. 6. Most grids were air dried in the mPrep/g capsule. When faster drying was required for immediate TEM imaging, extraneous water was wicked from grids by inserting a wedge of filter paper into the capsule and touching the paper where the grids contact the inside of the capsule.

Grids were examined at 80 keV in a Philips CM120 TEM and an FEI Tecnai 12 for rat and pig tissues. A JEOL 1200EX was used for the Dieffenbachia specimen and a Hitachi H-7600 for the vampire bat brain.

Measuring reagent consumption and labor efficiency

Reagent consumption for mPrep processing was compared to common vial and transfer pipette methods. The reagent consumed for processing 12 tissue specimens with mPrep/s capsules was measured with the pipettor. Reagent that would have been used in standard vial processing was calculated assuming 1 ml per reagent exchange. The reagent consumed for grid processing was not compared because mPrep/g capsules use 17.5 μl per grid (two grids in one 35 μl capsule), which is similar to typical droplet volumes of 25–100 μl per grid. The labor efficiency for processing 12 specimens and 16 grids was calculated by counting the number of physical operations required for mPrep capsule processing and the number of physical operations that would be used for vial tissue processing and droplet grid staining, as enumerated in Tables 1 and 2.

Table 1 Process and reagent efficiency to fix and embed 12 specimens using mPrep/s and vial processing.

* mPrep includes optional “topping off” of capsules with additional resin and optional insertion of a label into resin prior to curing. Vial assumes 2 ml resin per embedding in flat or BEEM-type molds.

Table 2 Process efficiency to stain 16 grids using mPrep/g processing and droplet staining.

* Wicking off excess water is optional with mPrep/g processing, hence the range in total user operations.

Results

Images of processed tissues

Three mammalian tissues and resultant sections on grids were entirely prepared using mPrep capsule processing. Figure 3 shows rat kidney imaged with LM and TEM, and Figure 4 shows pig heart and skin tissue. These micrographs indicate good tissue fixation and uniform staining. Figure 5 shows vampire bat brain sections stained using mPrep/g processing that exhibit uniform staining without precipitates. Figure 6 shows Dieffenbachia prepared using mPrep/s and mPrep/g capsule processing by technical college students learning electron microcopy. This specimen also shows good fixation and uniform staining.

Figure 3 Rat (Rattus norvegicus) kidney tissue prepared using mPrep/s and mPrep/g capsules. (a) Rat kidney section stained with polychrome I, transmitted light microscopy. Image width about 100 µm. (b) Rat kidney TEM image from the same block as the light micrograph. The box indicates the region shown in Figure 3c. (c) Rat kidney TEM image at higher magnification.

Figure 4 Porcine tissues entirely prepared using mPrep/s and mPrep/g capsules. (a) Porcine heart TEM showing myofibrils in various orientations and mitochondria. (b) Porcine skin TEM.

Figure 5 Vampire bat (Desmondontidae) brain prepared using mPrep/g grid staining.

Figure 6 Dieffenbachia (dumb cane) prepared using mPrep/s and mPrep/g capsules.

Labor efficiency and reagent consumption

The method for processing tissue with mPrep/s capsules was described in the Materials and Methods section of this article. The most commonly repeated steps were the 24 fluid reagent exchanges from fixative to final resin (Table 1). As shown in Figure 1, all these reagent exchanges were performed simultaneously by immersing the bottom ends of 12 mPrep/s capsules into reagent-containing reservoirs and operating the pipettor. Final embedding was achieved by simultaneously inserting all 12 resin-filled capsules into the silicone bench holder prior to transfer into the curing oven. Compared to vial processing, the number of manual operations was reduced 7-fold, from 324 to 49 operations with mPrep capsule processing. The total reagent consumed in preparing 12 specimens with mPrep/s capsules was 30 ml, compared to 312 ml calculated for vial processing, providing a 10-fold reduction (Table 1). Table 2 shows that simultaneous staining of 16 grids with mPrep/g capsules required as few as 20 operations, compared to over 100 calculated for droplet staining.

Discussion

Conventional processing methods are well established. Thus, the mPrep capsule methodology introduced here will be discussed in relation to these known methods.

Quality

As shown in Figures 36, with mPrep capsule processing all specimens were well preserved and stained cleanly and intensely. This is expected because the chemistry of sample preparation and staining were unchanged; only the devices used for delivering reagents and the reagent volumes were different. With mPrep capsule processing there is also the ability to improve quality and experimental reproducibility. This is because mPrep capsule pipetting provides simultaneous reagent delivery to multiple specimens thus providing identical reagent reaction times for all specimens. Secondly, because reagent exchanges occur very rapidly (≤1 second), the potential for accidental air drying that can occur with vial processing is nearly eliminated. Thirdly, because specimens are safely entrapped, the potential for damage caused by the specimen sticking to the side of vials, floating on the reagent surface, or being accidently sucked into transfer pipettes, is eliminated. Similarly, because grid handling is nearly eliminated, the probability for grid damage or loss is reduced, while simultaneous staining improves reproducibility.

Reagent efficiency

Because mPrep/s capsule volume is sized for TEM specimens, specimen processing only required 30 ml for 12 specimens (2.5 ml per specimen), as compared to a calculated reagent consumption of 26 ml per specimen for vial processing based on using only 1 ml per each vial reagent exchange (Table 1). This 10-fold reduction is substantial, yet it could be further reduced because as little as 10 μl per reagent exchange can be used with small specimens entrapped at the bottom of the capsules. Thus, the potential to reduce consumption by about 100-fold exists, which is especially desirable with expensive reagents such as antibodies, gold labels, or toxic compounds.

Operational efficiency

Simultaneous processing with multi-channel pipetting not only can improve reproducibility, but also can greatly reduce labor operations (Tables 1 and 2). Note that the simple counting of operations in Tables 12 does not fully characterize the improved operational ease. For mPrep reagent exchanges, minimal attention is required because specimens and grids are safely encapsulated, and only a simple depression of the pipettor aspirate-dispense button is required. With mPrep/s capsules, specimens are only directly handled when inserted into the capsule and when the block was prepared for sectioning. Sectioning preparation is also easier because mPrep/s capsules are directly chucked into the microtome and faced through the capsule (Figure 1d). With respect to grid processing, grids are only handled when they are inserted into an mPrep/g capsule and when removed from the microtome to insert into the TEM stage, thus greatly reducing operator attention in comparison to most staining methods. An additional effort reduction is that Prep/g capsules reduce air exposure so that lead citrate staining does not require hydroxide pellets to sequester carbon dioxide [Reference Bozzola and Russell12].

Enabling multiple protocol processing using microtiter plates

In the present study, specimens and grids were processed using multi-channel pipettes with reagent drawn from a single reagent reservoir (Figures 1b and 2c), thus all specimens and grids were processed with the same reagents. However, by using the innovation of the 96-well microtiter plate [Reference Cooke and Hall7Reference Manns9], it is just as easy to deliver different reagents to each of the mPrep capsules. This is simply achieved by placing different reagents, titrations, or stains into individual microtiter wells, and by using an 8- or 12-channel pipettor to draw reagents into mPrep capsules from different wells. This is shown in the Application Notes section of the Microscopy Innovations website where a template can guide protocols such as immuno-labeling [15]. This template methodology can be extended to many specimen or grid applications, such as the study where McClain simultaneously evaluated 16 different tissue fixation, embedding, and staining protocols [Reference McClain16].

Conclusion

The mPrep capsule processing method can improve the ease, efficiency, and reproducibility of TEM and SEM sample preparation protocols. Capsule processing can provide advantages that include identical and simultaneous preparation to increase reproducibility, to provide ten-fold or greater reduction of reagent consumption, and to afford a similar reduction in technician effort. This report shows that efficient processing, producing quality results, was achieved by multiple labs in three different institutions.

Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge the assistance of Patricia Kierski and Jonathon McAnulty (University of Wisconsin School of Veterinary Medicine) for providing fresh pig tissues, and Janice Pennington (Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin) for helpful advice. We also acknowledge the use of instrumentation supported by the University of Wisconsin Advanced Materials Industrial Consortium (DMR-1121288) and the Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (DMR-0832760).

References

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Figure 0

Figure 1 Tissue processing using mPrep/s capsules: (a) Empty mPrep/s capsule. The arrow indicates the location for entrapping specimens between the capsule bottom with 300 μm pores, and the removable, adjustable 300 μm pore screen. For clarity no specimen is shown. The tool to insert and remove the screen is not shown. (b) Twelve labeled mPrep/s capsules [s] attached to a 12-channel Pipetman held above the reagent reservoir. Each mPrep/s capsule contains a ~1 mm3 specimen and 100 μl reagent (en bloc uranyl acetate). Capsules are connected to the pipettor via an mPrep/f filter coupler [f]. (c) Twelve mPrep/s capsules filled with epoxy and inserted into the mPrep/bench just prior to ejection from the pipettor. (d) mPrep/s capsule clamped into a microtome chuck with the capsule trimmed away to expose the epoxy-embedded tissue. The arrow shows the faced epoxy block ready for sectioning.

Figure 1

Figure 2 TEM grid staining using mPrep/g capsules: (a) mPrep/g capsule with two copper grids inserted. Forceps tips are visible to right. (b) mPrep/g capsule with grids filled with uranyl acetate stain [g] attached to a single-channel pipettor via an mPrep/f coupler [f]. (c) Eight labeled mPrep/g capsules containing a total of 16 grids attached to an 8-channel Pipetman via mPrep/f couplers. Capsules are above a reagent reservoir filled with uranyl acetate stain.

Figure 2

Table 1 Process and reagent efficiency to fix and embed 12 specimens using mPrep/s and vial processing.

Figure 3

Table 2 Process efficiency to stain 16 grids using mPrep/g processing and droplet staining.

Figure 4

Figure 3 Rat (Rattus norvegicus) kidney tissue prepared using mPrep/s and mPrep/g capsules. (a) Rat kidney section stained with polychrome I, transmitted light microscopy. Image width about 100 µm. (b) Rat kidney TEM image from the same block as the light micrograph. The box indicates the region shown in Figure 3c. (c) Rat kidney TEM image at higher magnification.

Figure 5

Figure 4 Porcine tissues entirely prepared using mPrep/s and mPrep/g capsules. (a) Porcine heart TEM showing myofibrils in various orientations and mitochondria. (b) Porcine skin TEM.

Figure 6

Figure 5 Vampire bat (Desmondontidae) brain prepared using mPrep/g grid staining.

Figure 7

Figure 6 Dieffenbachia (dumb cane) prepared using mPrep/s and mPrep/g capsules.