Publication | Closed Access
Liquid nitrogen‐based quick freezing: Experiences with bounce‐free delivery of cholinergic nerve terminals to a metal surface
102
Citations
53
References
1984
Year
Quick FreezingEngineeringQuantitative CorrelationsCell BiophysicsBiomedical EngineeringCellular PhysiologyMembrane TransportSynaptic VesiclesMetal SurfaceCholinergic Nerve TerminalsBiophysicsMembrane BiologyMembrane SystemCell BiologyBiomolecular ScienceUltrastructureChemical FixationCellular NeuroscienceElectrophysiologyCellular StructureVesicle BiologyCellular BiochemistryMedicine
Abstract The limitations of chemical fixation in permitting the 1:1 quantitative correlations required for convincing ultrastructural explanations of cell biological processes are noted. We describe techniques for obtaining highly reproducible direct quick freezing on the polished surface of pure copper bars dipping into a static dewar of liquid N 2 . The importance and the ease of testing and obtaining bounce suppression with commerically available equipment is emphasized. Artefacts caused by tissue damage and bad freezing are illustrated, and a hitherto unrecognized population of presynaptic membrane attached vesicles is described in Torpedine electric organ. Between 15 and 20% of the synaptic vesicles are attached to ca. 30% of the cytoplasmic face of the presynaptic terminal membrane. There is a close correlation between the occurrence of such attachments and the application of electrocyte basal lamina to the external face. We suggest that these vesicles are the ‘membrane operators,’ ‘vesigates,’ and ‘highly active subpopulation’ of vesicles whose existence has been invoked to explain biochemical data in other laboratories. We further speculate that relatively selective Ca pumping by this immediately submembranous population leads to displacement of acetylcholine (ACh) and reloading with newly synthesized ACh. The preferential release of the latter would then be expected.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1