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New Microscope Reveals Ultrastructure of Cells

An anonymous reader writes "For the first time, there is no need to chemically fix, stain or cut cells in order to study them. Instead, whole living cells are fast-frozen and studied in their natural environment. The new method delivers an immediate 3-D image, thereby closing a gap between conventional microscopic techniques. The new microscope delivers a high-resolution 3-D image of the entire cell in one step. This is an advantage over electron microscopy, in which a 3-D image is assembled out of many thin sections. This can take up to weeks for just one cell. Also, the cell need not be labeled with dyes, unlike in fluorescence microscopy, where only the labeled structures become visible. The new X-ray microscope instead exploits the natural contrast between organic material and water to form an image of all cell structures. Dr. Gerd Schneider and his microscopy team at the Institute for Soft Matter and Functional Materials have published their development in Nature Methods (abstract)."

7 of 58 comments (clear)

  1. Lemme guess.. the article has no pictures by mozumder · · Score: 4, Informative

    (checks article)

    yep.

    1. Re:Lemme guess.. the article has no pictures by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      there are several pics from the article here:

      http://www.nature.com/nmeth/journal/vaop/ncurrent/fig_tab/nmeth.1533_ft.html

    2. Re:Lemme guess.. the article has no pictures by Snowgen · · Score: 5, Informative

      Call me a Karma-Whore, but here's the clickable link: http://www.nature.com/nmeth/journal/vaop/ncurrent/fig_tab/nmeth.1533_ft.html

  2. Re:I never thought I'd say this here by MeanMF · · Score: 5, Funny

    There are pictures, but unfortunately they're actual size.

  3. Old technique by vlm · · Score: 4, Informative

    Terrible misleading article. Maybe its the first time the journalist heard about it, but its hardly the first time this has ever been done.

    Despite a desperate attempt by the journalist filter to avoid "science-y words" I've figured out the technique they're talking about is xray microtomography. Basically yet another tomography tech (make a 3 d model in a computer out of a crapload of 2 d pix and lots of processing and memory) but applied to little things.

    "The first X-ray microtomography system was conceived and built by Jim Elliott in the early 1980s" Back then 50 nm was considered pretty good resolution, and thirty years later these dudes are down to 30 nm. A slight improvement on the past, and it is cool, but its not like they are "the first", like being the first men to step onto the moons surface or something.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-ray_microtomography

    Saying these guys are the first, is kind of like saying I'm the first human being to see the moons of jupiter thru a telescope, with the footnote that I'm defining telescope today as being home made using these exact lenses from Edmund Optics and these specific (empty) toilet paper tubes with these somewhat unique specific optical parameters, and no one has ever used that exact tech. Or I'm the first to have ever driven my car to work, while burning these specific individual hydrocarbon molecules.

    --
    "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    1. Re:Old technique by fjanss · · Score: 4, Informative
      X-ray_microtomography is not new. What is new is :

      "using partially coherent object illumination instead of previously used quasi-incoherent illumination"

      which led to :

      "We obtained three-dimensional reconstructions of mouse adenocarcinoma cells at ~36-nm (Rayleigh) and ~70-nm (Fourier ring correlation) resolution, which allowed us to visualize the double nuclear membrane, nuclear pores, nuclear membrane channels, mitochondrial cristae and lysosomal inclusions."

    2. Re:Old technique by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Coherence-based imaging (e.g. coherent diffractive imaging) is also not new. What these researchers have done is to push the envelope of what can be done by perfecting known imaging principles. They have not invented something drastically new.

      But I'm not trying to downplay their achievement in saying that their work is not without precedent. Frankly the media is over-obsessed with novelty. They only want to report on things from a "first of its kind" perspective, but that's fundamentally disconnected from the way science is done. All advancements build on previous work. Truly new and different things are rare--and they typically don't make much of a splash when they are first tried because the initial work is esoteric, crude, and primitive.

      What these scientists have done is really amazing. The images are fantastic and this will no doubt add to researchers' toolkit for analyzing materials in fine detail. I really wish that people could appreciate the quality of this work without it having to be exaggerated or its novelty mis-represented.