4.5 Article

Three-dimensional coherent X-ray diffractive imaging of whole frozen-hydrated cells

Journal

IUCRJ
Volume 2, Issue -, Pages 575-583

Publisher

INT UNION CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
DOI: 10.1107/S205225251501235X

Keywords

coherent diffractive imaging; cryo-CDI; three-dimensional imaging; three-dimensional cellular structure; coherent diffraction; X-ray imaging; Neospora caninum

Funding

  1. DARPA PULSE program through a grant from AMRDEC [DARPA-BAA-12-63]
  2. National Institutes of Health [GM081409-01A1, AI064616]
  3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Gilliam Fellowship
  4. UCLA MBI Whitcome Fellowship
  5. A. P. Giannini Postdoctoral fellowship
  6. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31430031]

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A structural understanding of whole cells in three dimensions at high spatial resolution remains a significant challenge and, in the case of X-rays, has been limited by radiation damage. By alleviating this limitation, cryogenic coherent diffractive imaging (cryo-CDI) can in principle be used to bridge the important resolution gap between optical and electron microscopy in bio-imaging. Here, the first experimental demonstration of cryo-CDI for quantitative three-dimensional imaging of whole frozen-hydrated cells using 8 keV X-rays is reported. As a proof of principle, a tilt series of 72 diffraction patterns was collected from a frozen-hydrated Neospora caninum cell and the threedimensional mass density of the cell was reconstructed and quantified based on its natural contrast. This three-dimensional reconstruction reveals the surface and internal morphology of the cell, including its complex polarized sub-cellular structure. It is believed that this work represents an experimental milestone towards routine quantitative three-dimensional imaging of whole cells in their natural state with spatial resolutions in the tens of nanometres.

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