Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
NEGATIVE STAINING Recent Developments in Negative Staining for Transmission Electron Microscopy J. Robin Harris 1, David Bhella 2 and Marc Adrian 3 1. Institute of Zoology, University of Mainz, Germany 2. MRC Virology Unit, Glasgow, UK 3. Department of Biology, University of Lausanne, Switzerland BIOGRAPHY Robin Harris obtained his PhD from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. After holding a lectureship in physiology at the University of St Andrews and a readership in biology at the North East London Polytechnic, he worked for the UK Blood Transfusion Service, at the German Cancer Research Centre in Heidelberg and at the Max-Planck-Institute for Biochemistry in Munich. Throughout his career, he has been involved with TEM, with emphasis upon the development of negative staining techniques and their application to a wide range of biological, medical and polymer science samples. ABSTRACT We describe some of the negative staining procedures that are currently available for the TEM study of biological and physical science samples. Some emphasis is placed upon the use of ammonium molybdate as a negative stain. The benefit to be gained from including trehalose is also discussed, as is the use of holey or perforated carbon support films for air-dried specimens. Cryonegative staining can provide the best negative stain data, with the advantages of improved specimen preservation in vitreous ice and the enhanced contrast of the embedding medium versus the biological particle. The application of negative staining to aqueous and organic solvent polymer solutions, dynamic or time-resolved systems, the formation of 2D crystals and higher order assemblies, epitope and affinity labelling, and to nanotechnology and nanobiology samples are all discussed. KEYWORDS transmission electron microscopy, negative staining, cryonegative staining, ammonium molybdate, uranyl acetate, trehalose, holey carbon support film, bacteria, viruses, particles, polymers, nanobiology INTRODUCTION Negative staining has been a useful specimen preparation technique for biological and medical electron microscopists for almost 50 years, following its introduction as an established procedure by Robert (Bob) Horne [1]. During this period of time the technique has slowly undergone extensive modification and improvement, now extending well beyond the simple use of aqueous uranyl acetate as a negative stain for samples adsorbed to a relatively thick carbon-plastic film or to a thinner but more fragile carbon support film. Several scientists have been responsible for this progress, including Bob Horne, with the development of the mica-spreading ‘negative staining-carbon film’ procedure (reviewed in [2]), which has been useful for the preparation of twodimensional crystals of viral particles and protein molecules. Apart from the cationic and slightly acidic 1% or 2% w/v aqueous uranyl acetate, solutions of several other anionic heavy metal-containing salts have been routinely used for negative staining (e.g. tungstate, phosphotungstate, silicotungstate, molybdate and vanadate), usually at neutral pH. By varying the stain concentration, different levels of stain density can be achieved. However, it will be found that after drying, the molybdate and vanadate negative stains impart lower mass density around the biological material than uranyl acetate. The anionic negative stains generally have a finer granularity and have less direct (charge-dependent) interaction with the biological material (there are, however, notable exceptions, such as when an anionic stain produces haemocyanin dissociation). Inclusion of the disaccharide trehalose as a biological protectant during negative staining has been shown to be beneficial [3]. This di-glucose is known to have remarkable properties as a protectant during the drying of biological material and its exposure to high temperatures and UV irradiation, possibly by replacing or retaining bound water; this property may well be beneficial at the level of the air-dried TEM specimen grid and when it is exposed to complete dehydration in vacuo, and also in the electron beam. In this short review we will present a survey of several recent technical developments in negative staining, all of which have led to routine/established procedures and have the potential for wide application in the biomedical and physical sciences. The following recent developments will be discussed: 1. Negative staining in the presence of trehalose on continuous carbon films. 2. Airdry negative staining on holey carbon support films. 3. Cryonegative staining on holey carbon support films. Only a few relevant applications of negative staining will be presented here; these represent areas where negative staining is currently useful and likely to be of increasing importance for future studies: negative staining of aqueous and organic solvent polymer solutions and colloidal suspensions; dynamic or time-resolved negative staining; 2D crystallization of viruses and proteins, and formation of higher-order supramolecular assemblies during negative staining; epitope-specific antibody and site-specific affinity labelling revealed by negative staining; and negative staining of nanotechnology and nanobiology specimens. For technical details and protocols the reader should see the literature and a recent review [27]. The impact and expansion of digital image processing and 3D reconstruction of macromolecular electron optical images at near-to-atomic resolution continues apace, but will not be expanded upon. Some negative staining approaches, such as freeze-fracture negative staining and the negative staining-carbon film technique, will also not be dealt with here. Figure 1: Haemoglobin from the marine annelid Nereis virens negatively stained with 5% ammonium molybdate with 1% trehalose (pH 7.0) on a carbon support film. Note the presence of intact hexameric molecules (arrowheads) and dissociating molecules, with smaller sub-components on the background. Scale bar = 100 nm. A U T H O R D E TA I L S Prof. J. Robin Harris, Institute of Zoology, University of Mainz, D-55099 Mainz, Germany. Tel: +44 (0)1277 210163 (UK Home) Email: [email protected] Microscopy and Analysis 20(3):17-21 (UK), 2006 MICROSCOPY AND A N A LY S I S • M AY 2 0 0 6 17 Figure 2a: Micronemes from Cryptosporidium parvum negatively stained with 5% ammonium molybdate with 1% trehalose after spreading across a holey carbon support film. Note the clustering of the micronemes to the edge of the hole. Intact micronemes appear as electron transparent rods, whereas micronemes with a damaged surface membrane allow stain entry. Scale bar = 100 nm. Figure 2b: The metalloendopeptidase meprin-a negatively stained on a holey carbon support film with 5% ammonium in 0.1% trehalose (pH 7.0). Scale bar = 100 nm. N E G AT I V E S TA I N I N G I N T H E PRESENCE OF TREHALOSE A I R - D R Y N E G AT I V E S TA I N I N G ON HOLEY CARBON SUPPORTS With the accumulating knowledge that trehalose is uniquely beneficial for the preservation of biological materials during dehydration, cold-storage, freezing, UV irradiation, etc., it was a natural extension to prepare negatively stained specimens in the presence of this disaccharide for TEM study. The most satisfactory combination of negative stain with trehalose is to use ammonium molybdate [3,4], in this instance with a 1% w/v trehalose and 5% w/v ammonium molybdate, neutralized with NH4OH or NaOH, with the biological sample adsorbed to a glow-discharged continuous carbon support film. The increased concentration of ammonium molybdate, above the more usual 2% w/v, is required because of the reduction in net mass density due to the presence of 1% trehalose. The immediate benefit to be gained is that the film of dried stain and trehalose is somewhat thicker than is often the case with stain alone, allowing the biological material to be subjected to a reduced flattening force. In addition, ammonium molybdate does have a tendency to release adsorbed particles from the carbon; these can then beneficially adopt varying random orientations within the relatively deep stain-trehalose solution, prior to drying (Figure 1). Although some electron-beam sensitivity of the stain film may be encountered, conventional electron doses at minimal conventional beam intensity do not rapidly influence the trehalose, unlike the situation with glucose and sucrose that more rapidly bubble in the electron beam. If, however, a low electrondose system is available on the TEM, it should be used. Uranyl acetate and trehalose mixtures have been found to be workable, but the granularity of this stain and some increased sensitivity of the sample to the electron beam is more apparent that with the ammonium molybdate-trehalose combination. Other negative staining salts, such as the phosphotungstate and silicotungstate can also be used successfully in combination with trehalose. Although many researchers may have appreciated the fact that to study biological samples that are suspended in a thin layer of negative stain alone (i.e. without an underlying carbon support) could offer technical advantages, until fairly recently this was not established as a routine procedure. The chance spreading of an aqueous stain and sample film across the corner of a grid square undoubtedly provided 18 MICROSCOPY AND a b c A N A LY S I S • M AY 2 0 0 6 the first indications that this approach can succeed, but considerable reproducibility and mechanical stability problems were usually encountered. Significant progress came when samples were spread across glow-discharged holey carbon support films and stained with negative stain and trehalose [5]. Although 5% w/v ammonium molybdate with 1.0% w/v trehalose is acceptable, some instability in the electron beam will be encountered unless low electron doses are used. However, in the presFigure 3: Comparison of conventional negative staining and cryonegative staining. (a) Measles virus ribonucleoprotein imaged in 2% w/v ammonium molybdate adsorbed to a continuous carbon support film. (b) Similar sample imaged in ammonium molybdate cryonegative stain suspended across a hole in the carbon support. Note the superior image detail and specimen preservation. Scale bars = 100 nm. (c) 3D reconstruction of Echovirus type 12 bound to a two-domain fragment of its cellular receptor, CD55, calculated at 16 Å resolution from cryonegative stain TEM data. Docking of crystallographic coordinates for component molecules to the EM map produces a quasiatomic resolution model of the virusreceptor complex. NEGATIVE STAINING ence of 5% w/v ammonium molybdate and 0.1% w/v trehalose, the stability is superior, particularly when the holes contain an even, thinly spread film of sample embedded in negative stain. For negative staining across holes, a relatively high sample concentration should be applied to the grid (~1.0 mg ml-1) as subsequent washing to remove salts and addition of negative stain reduces the final concentration. The strict maintenance of sample and stain on one side only of the grid is critical for the success of this technique. A representative example of the successful use of the holey carbon negative staining technique, showing isolated micronemes [6] from the apicomplexan parasite Cryptosporidium parvum, is given in Figure 2a. Some clustering of the micronemes towards the edge of the hole, within a slightly thicker film of stain, is characteristic of this technique, which indicates the freedom of the organelles immediately prior to drying of the stain. A macromolecular example is given in Figure 2b. Here the endopeptidase meprin-a is shown; the protein particles, some of which form curving chains, are freely spread in the ammonium molybdate-trehalose film. When samples are spread across holes in the presence of 1% w/v trehalose alone, the thin film of dried trehalose is remarkably stable in the electron beam [5]. This approach, which avoids the use of negative stain, has potential for biological, polymer science and nanotechnology samples where the inherent sample density is greater than that of the surrounding trehalose layer. C R Y O N E G AT I V E S TA I N I N G Computerised 3D image reconstruction was initially developed as a technique for the analysis of negatively stained biological macromolecules [7,8]. Recently, however, the use of negative stain has largely been superseded by cryoelectron microscopy: imaging of unstained hydrated specimens embedded in vitreous ice [9]. The advent of cryoelectron microscopy combined with developments in TEM technology, such as the field-emission gun (FEG), has permitted microscopists to attain close-to-atomic resolution data. Imaging of unstained vitreous specimens does present significant difficulties however, not least that image data are very low contrast, requiring often significant levels of defocus and consequent contrast transfer function correction, to image smaller macromolecules (300-500 kDa). Vitreous specimens are also highly susceptible to radiation damage and furthermore require specialised and expensive electron microscopes to achieve high resolution. The recent development of cryonegative staining by Adrian et al. [10] abrogates some of these difficulties while retaining the enhanced specimen preservation obtained through imaging material embedded in vitreous ice. As with negative staining of biological material embedded in the presence of trehalose, cryonegative staining requires a higher concentration of stain to attain adequate contrast, typically a solution of 16-20% w/v ammonium molybdate at neutral pH is used. Prepa- Figure 4: A liquid crystalline 2D array of the amphiphilic poly(dimethylsiloxane)-bpoly(ethylene oxide) diblock copolymer spread across a hole and negatively stained with 5% ammonium molybdate in 0.1% trehalose (pH 7.0). Scale bar = 100 nm. ration of cryonegatively stained material is performed in an essentially similar manner to that for cryoelectron microscopy of unstained vitrified specimens. Approximately 5 µl of sample suspension at a concentration of 0.20.5 mg ml-1 is applied to a freshly glow-discharged or gold-sputtered holey carbon support film. The sample is then washed for 5-60 seconds (depending on sample stability) in the stain solution. Finally the sample is blotted for 1-2 seconds to produce a thin aqueous film of sample in stain across the holey support film, which is allowed to thin by air drying for a further 1-2 seconds before the grid is plunged into a bath of liquid nitrogen-cooled ethane slush. The vitrified sample is then transferred to the microscope and imaged under low electron-dose conditions at liquid-nitrogen temperatures. Cryonegatively stained specimens have been shown to contain 30% water [10] and many studies have demonstrated improvements in sample preservation when compared to conventionally negative stained material. Figure 3a shows measles virus ribonucleoprotein imaged in 2% w/v ammonium molybdate adsorbed to a continuous carbon support film, compared with the same sample imaged in a cryonegative stain (Figure 3b), suspended across a hole in the carbon support, clearly demonstrating significant improvement in preservation in the frozen-hydrated stained material [11]. The enhanced contrast and preservation of cryonegative stain brings considerable advantages to 3D reconstruction studies, particularly when access to a modern top-of-the-range electron microscope is limiting. It is routinely possible to collect data on a 120 kV cryoelectron microscope, in which structure information can be measured out to 10 Å resolution (as determined by the presence of Thon rings in incoherently averaged power spectra, calculated from single micrograph data sets). Several 3D reconstructions have been published at resolutions of 12-14 Å using this technique (Figure 3c), allowing the fitting of crystallographic data to produce quasi-atomic resolution models [12] While such resolutions are occasionally attainable by cryoelectron microscopy of unstained vitrified specimens at 120 kV, such data are difficult to generate, requiring optimal ice-thickness, sample and imaging conditions. The paucity of published reconstructions from 120 kV electron microscopes at greater than 20 Å resolution is testament to the advantages that cryonegative staining offers such investigations. Indeed the practical resolution limits of this technique are still subject to debate. While it has been suggested that cryonegative stain is limited by the grain size of the stain and is also restricted to analysis of the stain-excluded surface regions of the sample, it is likely that higher resolution internal features are retained, although more weakly imaged. Such data may be accessible by development of appropriate image processing methods. Cryonegative staining may also prove useful for tomographic 3D image reconstruction. The process of collecting a tilt series of 60-70 images from a single frozen-hydrated object incurs significant loss of data due to radiation damage. Furthermore, cryonegative stain samples have recently been shown to be less susceptible to radiation damage [13]. Combined with the advantage of enhanced con- b Figure 5: Cholesterol microcrystals with attached Vibrio cholerae cytolysin (VCC) oligomers. (a) After 15 min. incubation the pore-like oligomers are attached only at the bilayer edges of the planar cholesterol crystals. (b) Following 1h incubation the whole of the surfaces of the microcrystals are coated with oligomers [21]. The samples were negatively stained with 2% ammonium molybdate following adsorption to a carbon support film. MICROSCOPY AND A N A LY S I S • M AY 2 0 0 6 19 trast, leading to improved alignment of the tilt series, cryonegative stain would seem to have much to offer in this field. a b N E G AT I V E S TA I N I N G O F P O LY M E R S A N D C O L L O I D S Despite the fact that polymer chemists use a variety of physical techniques to assess the size and shape of their synthetic particles, the exploitation of TEM negative staining has been rather slow, even though aqueous polymer solutions behave in an essentially similar manner to biological macromolecules and subcellular organelles. Aqueous suspensions of gas-filled n-butyl-2-cyanoacrylate microcapsules, termed cavisomes, have been studied using negative staining on carbon support films [14]. In this instance the globular surface of the cavisomes was revealed, an interpretation supported by metal shadowing. Further application of negative staining to copolymer particles, in both aqueous and organic solvents [15,16] showed that uranyl acetate can be utilized as dimethylformamide, tetrahydrofurane and dimethylsulphoxide solutions, selected for miscibility with the copolymer solutions. Furthermore, the aqueous polymer solutions and colloidal suspensions can also be usefully imaged by negative staining across holes, with ammonium molybdate and trehalose, as shown in Figure 4, or in trehalose alone [5]. Others are gradually appreciating the potential and simplicity of air-dry negative staining for the study of polymers and it can be predicted that it will be increasingly used for polymer samples, alongside cryonegative staining and unstained cryoelectron microscopy. DYNAMIC AND TIMER E S O LV E D N E G AT I V E S TA I N I N G The use of transmission electron microscopy for the study of slow and rapid time-dependent events has always presented considerable possibilities. With negative staining, the drying of the thin layer of stain solution occurs over 1-2 minutes, and this might generally be thought to impose a minimum time period for dynamic studies, but this is not the case under conditions where the direct action of the negative stain or a fixative has the ability to rapidly trap biological material in a defined metabolic state. This latter approach has been particularly successful for the dynamic study of flexible molecules and myosin filaments [17,18]. For any system where the time-dependent changes occur over a period in excess of a few minutes, conventional negative staining on a continuous carbon support film or across holey carbon films can be successfully utilized. With cryonegative staining, sample pretreatment would again generally be somewhat slow, but the possibility to treat a sample immediately before plunge freezing, such as by suddenly changing the pH, adding a metabolite or drug, or exposure to a temperature change, lighting conditions or gaseous environment, could reduce the interaction time to the millisecond range. There is great interest in the many peptides that spontaneously form fibres in aqueous 20 MICROSCOPY AND Figure 6: (a) 2D arrays of the ring-like decameric peroxiredoxin from Thermus aquaticus (courtesy of Stephen G. Mayhew) spread across a holey carbon support film in the presence of 5% ammonium molybdate and 1% trehalose (pH 7.0). (b) Dodecahedral supramolecular assemblies formed from the decameric erythrocyte peroxiredoxin-2 in the presence of 5% ammonium molybdate, 0.1% trehalose and 0.2% PEG (Mr 1000) (pH 6.5), when spread across a holey carbon support film. and physiological solutions, in particular the amyloid-b and tau peptides involved in Alzheimer’s disease. Dynamic negative staining performed over a period of minutes, hours and days provides a system by which peptide oligomerization, protofibril and fibre formation, and fibre aggregation can be assessed. When combined with studies on potentiating compounds and drugs that inhibit fibrillogenesis this negative staining approach can immediately be readily seen to have even further possibilities [19,20]. The time-dependent interaction of bacterial pore-forming toxins with biomembranes and artificial lipid systems can likewise be investigated using negative staining. We found that over a period of a few minutes the cytolysin from Vibro cholerae formed oligomers attached to the bilayer edges of cholesterol microcrystals, but over a longer period of time (1 h) the planar surfaces of the microcrystals also became coated with oligomers [21], as shown in Figure 5. 2D CRYSTALLIZATION OF VIRUSES AND PROTEINS AND FORMATION OF MACROMOLECULAR ASSEMBLIES Induction of 2D crystal formation by viruses and protein molecules in the presence of ammonium molybdate and polyethylene glycol (PEG) is the underlying formative principle of the mica-spreading negative staining-carbon film technique [2]. Intermolecular forces A N A LY S I S • M AY 2 0 0 6 at the fluid-air interface and in solution, rather than at the fluid-mica interface are considered to be of importance for the production of ordered arrays [4]. On transferring this approach to samples spread across holey carbon support films, it has been found that, again, viruses and protein molecules have a tendency to produce 2D crystals (Figure 6a) [5]. Furthermore, the time-dependent creation of higher-order macromolecular assemblies in the staining solution spread across the holes of holey carbon support films can also occur (Figure 6b), indicating that the negative staining procedure can actually be utilised to induce experimental changes. Similarly, the cryonegative stain procedure can incorporate the presence of PEG to induce 2D crystallization, prior to specimen freezing [10]. N E G AT I V E S TA I N I N G A N D IMMUNOLABELLING The combination of negative staining with immunolabelling has been available since the early days of the technique, but in comparison to pre- and postembedding immunogold labelling of thin sectioned biological material, it has received relatively little attention. However, by negative staining, immunogold labelling can even reveal the location of an internalised C. parvum microneme antigen, but only when the microneme surface membrane is damaged [22]. With the increasing availability of peptide sequence-specific polyFigure 7: Decamers, didecamers and multidecamers of keyhole limpet hemocyanin type 2 (KLH2), linked with a monoclonal IgG specific for an epitope on the functional unit h, located at the collar edge of the decamers (smaller arrowheads). Decamers (larger arrowheads) are always located at the ends of the antibody-linked molecular chains. Negatively stained with 5% ammonium molybdate in 1% trehalose (pH 7.0) after adsorption to a carbon support film. NEGATIVE STAINING clonal and monoclonal IgGs, Fab’ fragments and single-chain variable (scFv) cloned antibody fragments, it is possible to perform immunolabelling at the molecular level, in an attempt to define the location of defined and accessible epitopes on the surface of macromolecules [23]. The macromolecular linkage pattern induced by bivalent IgG can be particularly useful (Figure 7), but a higher level of definition can be achieved (albeit with greater technical difficulty) by defining the location of bound Fab’ [24]. Site-specific affinity labelling is being increasingly used in molecular studies. The biotin-streptavidin system is particularly powerful, because of the high affinity between these two reagents, and the fact that biotinylated proteins and nucleic acids can readily be produced. His-tagged proteins can be labelled with his-specific antibodies or with nickellinked gold probes. Labelling with small gold probes (e.g. 2-5 nm colloidal gold, nanogold and undecagold) can readily be performed in combination with negative staining and cryoelectron microscopy of unstained vitrified specimens. The density of the negative stain needs to be minimized, to avoid masking the small gold probes, thus sodium vanadate or a low concentration of ammonium molybdate should be employed. Protein-protein interactions often can be studied by negative staining, significantly when one of the proteins possesses a fibrous nature and binds a soluble protein on to its surface. The amyloid-b peptide, composing the fibres within Alzheimer amyloid plaques, binds several different proteins with both saltand peptide sequence-specific affinity. Of interest is the binding of the antioxidant enzyme catalase to amyloid fibres, as this could be of physiological significance in relation to combating the putative oxidant activity of the amyloid-b peptide. Figure 8 shows the binding of human erythrocyte catalase to fibres formed from the amyloid-b 17-32 fragment. The complimentary peptide sequences on catalase and amyloid-b have been defined biochemically, thus introducing the possibility of probing structurally the interaction site of the two proteins by TEM. NANOSTRUCTURES Alongside atomic force microscopy, TEM has much to contribute within the disciplines of nanotechnology and nanobiology. Negative staining can often be utilized, in some instances to complement the study of unstained samples. Particulate chemical and materials science samples as well as synthetic and biological polymers and lipids (nanoparticles, nanovesicles, nanotubules and nanofibres) can all be studied by negative staining, as long as aqueous or organic solvent suspensions or solutions are available at an appropriate concentration (i.e. overloading of an EM grid is worse than underloading!) [25]. The pharmaceutical industry, with its wideranging emphasis on drug delivery systems and biodegradable nanoparticles could have much to gain from the use of TEM during product development and quality assessment. Figure 8: Fibres of the amyloid beta 17-40 fragment following incubation with human erythrocyte catalase, negatively stained with 2% uranyl acetate [19]. The catalase molecules decorate the surface of the fibres. Figure 9: A biotinylated DNA nanotubule decorated with streptavidin [26]. The sample was spread across a holey carbon support film and negatively stained with 5% ammonium molybdate with 0.1% trehalose (pH 7.0). An example of synthetic DNA nanotubules incorporating a biotinylated nucleotide, and subsequently labelled with streptavidin [26], is given in Figure 9, prepared by the holeycarbon negative-staining technique. 12. Bhella, D. et al. The structure of echovirus type 12 bound to a two-domain fragment of its cellular attachment protein decay-accelerating factor (CD 55) J. Biol. Chem. 279:83258332, 2004. 13. De Carlo, S. et al. cryonegative staining reduces electronbeam sensitivity of vitrified biological particles. J. Struct. Biol. 138:216-226, 2002. 14. Harris, J. R. et al. The structure of gas-filled n-butyl-2-cyanoacrylate (BCA) polymer particles. Micron 26:103-111, 1995. 15. Harris, J. R. et al. Application of the negative staining technique to both aqueous and organic solvent solutions of polymer particles. Micron 30:289-298, 1999. 16. Maskos, M. and Harris, J. R. Double-shell vesicles, strings of vesicles and filaments found in crosslinked micellar solutions of poly(1,2-butadiene)-block-poly(ethylene oxide) diblock copolymers. Macromol. Rapid Commun. 22:271273, 2001. 17. Burgess, S. A. et al. Use of negative stain and single-particle image processing to explore dynamic properties of flexible macromolecules. J. Struct. Biol. 147:247-258, 2004. 18. Zhao, F.-Q. and Craig, R. Capturing time-resolved changes in molecular structure by negative staining. J. Struct. Biol. K141:43-52, 2003. 19. Harris, J. R. In vitro fibrillogenesis of the amyloid a 1-42 peptide: Cholesterol potentiation and aspirin inhibition. Micron 33:609-626, 2002. 20. Bohrmann, B. et al. Self-assembly of b-amyloid 42 is retarded by small molecular ligands at the stage of structural intermediates. J. Struct. Biol. 130:232-246, 2000. 21. Harris, J. R. et al. Interaction of the Vibrio cholerae cytolysin with cholesterol, some cholesterol esters and cholesterol derivatives: a TEM study. J. Struct. Biol. 139:122-135, 2002. 22. Petry, F. and Harris, J. R. Ultrastructure, fractionation and biochemical analysis of Cryptosporidium parvum sporozoites. Int. J. Parasitol. 29:1249-1260, 1999. 23. Harris, J. R. Immunonegative staining: epitope localization on macromolecules. Methods: A companion to Methods in Enzymology 10:234-246, 1996. 24. Tulloch, P. A. et al. Single-molecule imaging of human insulin receptor ectodomain and its Fab complexes. J. Struct. Biol. 125:11-18, 1999. 25. Hartgerink at al. Peptide-amphiphile nanofibers: A versatile scaffold for the preparation of self-assembling materials. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 99:5133-5138, 2002. 26. Mitchell, J. C. et al. Self-assembly of chiral DNA nanotubes. J. Amer. Chem. Soc. 126:16342-16343, 2004. 27. Harris, J. R. Negative Staining of Thinly Spread Biological Samples, in: Electron Microscopy Methods and Protocols, Methods in Molecular Biology. Vol. 117, 2nd edition. Edited by John Kuo, Humana Press, In Press. CONCLUDING COMMENTS We have reviewed recent developments in negative staining for transmission electron microscopy. We have tried to present a range of newer negative staining techniques and applications, to show that negative staining has progressed significantly over the past decade, thereby advancing considerably from the initial technique [1]. We believe that the availability of the different negative stains and negative staining approaches offers much to both the biological and physical sciences. REFERENCES 1. Brenner, S. and Horne, R. W. A negative staining method for high resolution electron microscopy of viruses. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 34:60-71, 1959. 2. Harris, J. R. The Preparation of Negatively Stained 2 Dimensional Crystals. Microscopy and Analysis, July (UK), 13-16, 1992. 3. Harris, J. R. et al. Keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH): Negative Staining in the presence of trehalose. Micron 26:2533, 1995. 4. Harris, J. R. Negative Staining and Cryoelectron Microscopy: the thin film techniques. RMS Handbook No. 35, Bios Scientific Publishers, Oxford, UK, 1997. 5. Harris, J. R. and Scheffler, D. Routine preparation of airdried negatively stained and unstained specimens on holey carbon support films: a review of applications. Micron 33:461-480, 2002. 6. Harris, J. R. et al. Structure of the Cryptosporidium parvum microneme: a metabolically and osmotically labile apicomplexan organelle. Micron 34:65-78, 2003. 7. DeRosier, D. J. and Klug, A. Reconstruction of three dimensional structures from electron micrographs. Nature 217:130-134, 1968. 8. Crowther, R. A. et al. Three dimensional reconstructions of spherical viruses by Fourier synthesis from electron micrographs. Nature 226:421-425, 1970. 9. Adrian, M. et al. Cryo-electron microscopy of viruses. Nature 308:32-36, 1984. 10. Adrian, M. et al. Cryonegative staining. Micron 29:145-160, 1998. 11. Bhella, D. et al. Conformational flexibility in recombinant measles virus nucleocapsids visualised by cryonegative stain electron microscopy and real-space helical reconstruction. J. Mol. Biol. 340:319-331, 2004. MICROSCOPY ©2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd AND A N A LY S I S • M AY 2 0 0 6 21