{"title":"用扫描隧道显微镜成像软材料。","authors":"J T Woodward, J A Zasadzinski","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>By modifying freeze-fracture replication, a standard electron microscopy fixation technique, for use with the scanning tunneling microscope (STM), a variety of soft, non-conductive biomaterials can be imaged at high resolution in three dimensions. Metal replicas make near ideal samples for STM in comparison to the original biological materials. Modifications include a 0.1 micron backing layer of silver and mounting the replicas on a fine-mesh silver filters to enhance the rigidity of the metal replica. This is required unless STM imaging is carried out in vacuum; otherwise, a liquid film of contamination physically connects the STM tip with the sample. This mechanical coupling leads to exaggerated height measurements; the enhanced rigidity of the thicker replica eliminates much of the height amplification. Further improvement was obtained by imaging in a dry nitrogen atmosphere. Calibration and reproducibility were tested with replicas of well characterized bilayers of cadmium arachidate on mica that provide regular 5.5 nm steps. We have used the STM/replica technique to examine the ripple shape and amplitude in the P beta phase of dimyristoylphosphatidyl-choline (DMPC) in water. STM images were analyzed using a cross-correlation averaging program to eliminate the effects of noise and the finite size and shapes of the metal grains that make up the replica. The correlation averaging allowed us to develop a composite ripple profile averaged over hundreds of individual ripples and different samples. The STM/replica technique is sufficiently general that it can be used to examine a variety of hydrated lipid and protein samples at a lateral resolution of about 1 nm and a vertical resolution of about 0.3 nm.</p>","PeriodicalId":77379,"journal":{"name":"Scanning microscopy. 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This is required unless STM imaging is carried out in vacuum; otherwise, a liquid film of contamination physically connects the STM tip with the sample. This mechanical coupling leads to exaggerated height measurements; the enhanced rigidity of the thicker replica eliminates much of the height amplification. Further improvement was obtained by imaging in a dry nitrogen atmosphere. Calibration and reproducibility were tested with replicas of well characterized bilayers of cadmium arachidate on mica that provide regular 5.5 nm steps. We have used the STM/replica technique to examine the ripple shape and amplitude in the P beta phase of dimyristoylphosphatidyl-choline (DMPC) in water. STM images were analyzed using a cross-correlation averaging program to eliminate the effects of noise and the finite size and shapes of the metal grains that make up the replica. The correlation averaging allowed us to develop a composite ripple profile averaged over hundreds of individual ripples and different samples. The STM/replica technique is sufficiently general that it can be used to examine a variety of hydrated lipid and protein samples at a lateral resolution of about 1 nm and a vertical resolution of about 0.3 nm.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":77379,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Scanning microscopy. Supplement\",\"volume\":\"10 \",\"pages\":\"123-47; discussion 147-8\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"1996-01-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Scanning microscopy. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
通过修改冷冻断裂复制,一种标准的电子显微镜固定技术,用于扫描隧道显微镜(STM),各种软的,不导电的生物材料可以在高分辨率的三维成像。与原始生物材料相比,金属复制品为STM提供了接近理想的样品。修改包括0.1微米的银衬底层,并将复制品安装在细孔银过滤器上,以增强金属复制品的刚性。这是必需的,除非STM成像是在真空中进行的;否则,污染的液体膜将STM尖端与样品物理连接起来。这种机械耦合导致高度测量被夸大;较厚的复制品的增强刚性消除了高度放大的大部分。在干燥的氮大气中成像得到了进一步的改进。校准和再现性通过在云母上提供常规5.5 nm台阶的表征良好的石墨烯酸镉双层的复制品进行了测试。我们使用STM/复制技术检测了水中二肉豆酰磷脂酰胆碱(DMPC) P β相的波纹形状和振幅。STM图像使用相互关联平均程序进行分析,以消除噪声和组成副本的金属晶粒的有限尺寸和形状的影响。相关平均使我们能够在数百个单独的波纹和不同的样本中平均出一个复合波纹轮廓。STM/复制技术具有足够的通用性,可用于检测各种水合脂质和蛋白质样品,横向分辨率约为1nm,纵向分辨率约为0.3 nm。
Imaging soft materials with scanning tunneling microscopy.
By modifying freeze-fracture replication, a standard electron microscopy fixation technique, for use with the scanning tunneling microscope (STM), a variety of soft, non-conductive biomaterials can be imaged at high resolution in three dimensions. Metal replicas make near ideal samples for STM in comparison to the original biological materials. Modifications include a 0.1 micron backing layer of silver and mounting the replicas on a fine-mesh silver filters to enhance the rigidity of the metal replica. This is required unless STM imaging is carried out in vacuum; otherwise, a liquid film of contamination physically connects the STM tip with the sample. This mechanical coupling leads to exaggerated height measurements; the enhanced rigidity of the thicker replica eliminates much of the height amplification. Further improvement was obtained by imaging in a dry nitrogen atmosphere. Calibration and reproducibility were tested with replicas of well characterized bilayers of cadmium arachidate on mica that provide regular 5.5 nm steps. We have used the STM/replica technique to examine the ripple shape and amplitude in the P beta phase of dimyristoylphosphatidyl-choline (DMPC) in water. STM images were analyzed using a cross-correlation averaging program to eliminate the effects of noise and the finite size and shapes of the metal grains that make up the replica. The correlation averaging allowed us to develop a composite ripple profile averaged over hundreds of individual ripples and different samples. The STM/replica technique is sufficiently general that it can be used to examine a variety of hydrated lipid and protein samples at a lateral resolution of about 1 nm and a vertical resolution of about 0.3 nm.