Sample deposition onto cryo-EM grids: from sprays to jets and back

By David P. Klebl, Diana Monteiro, Dimitrios Kontziampasis, Florian Kopf, Frank Sobott, Howard D. White, Martin Trebbin1, Stephen P. Muench

1. University at Buffalo

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journal-article

Author

David P. Klebl and Diana C. F. Monteiro and Dimitrios Kontziampasis and Florian Kopf and Frank Sobott and Howard D. White and Martin Trebbin and Stephen P. Muench

Citation

Klebl, D.P. et al., 2020. Sample deposition onto cryo-EM grids: from sprays to jets and back. Acta Crystallographica Section D Structural Biology, 76(4), pp.340–349. Available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/s2059798320002958.

Abstract

Despite the great strides made in the field of single-particle cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) in microscope design, direct electron detectors and new processing suites, the area of sample preparation is still far from ideal. Traditionally, sample preparation involves blotting, which has been used to achieve high resolution, particularly for well behaved samples such as apoferritin. However, this approach is flawed since the blotting process can have adverse effects on some proteins and protein complexes, and the long blot time increases exposure to the damaging air–water interface. To overcome these problems, new blotless approaches have been designed for the direct deposition of the sample on the grid. Here, different methods of producing droplets for sample deposition are compared. Using gas dynamic virtual nozzles, small and high-velocity droplets were deposited on cryo-EM grids, which spread sufficiently for high-resolution cryo-EM imaging. For those wishing to pursue a similar approach, an overview is given of the current use of spray technology for cryo-EM grid preparation and areas for enhancement are pointed out. It is further shown how the broad aspects of sprayer design and operation conditions can be utilized to improve grid quality reproducibly.

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