Leica Microsystems Combines Advantages of Cryo Fixation, Fluorescence Light Microscopy and Electron Microscopy in One System

Leica EM Cryo CLEM Features the World’s First Cryo CLEM Objective

19 Mar 2015
Sarah Thomas
Associate Editor

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Leica Microsystems launches Leica EM Cryo CLEM, a system that facilitates correlative light and electron microscopy (CLEM). In CLEM, the sample is studied under the fluorescence light microscope and the electron microscope. The system allows rapid screening of large areas and fast determination of regions of interest which can then be quickly recognized in the electron microscope. This can reduce up to 50% of the user interaction on the cryo electron microscope and helps users save time. In addition, the image data from both sources can be combined, resulting in a deeper understanding of the analyzed sample. The Leica EM Cryo CLEM system consists of a fluorescence light microscope with cryo stage, cryo objective, and a cyro transfer shuttle. It keeps cryo-fixed samples under cyro conditions during imaging in the fluorescence light microscope and during transfer. For the Leica EM Cryo CLEM system, Leica Microsystems developed the world’s first commercially available cyro CLEM objective to enable localizing of fluorescent-labeled target structures.

“Working with the Leica EM Cryo CLEM system ensures fast, safe, contamination-free sample transfer and loading from cryo sample preparation instruments to the fixed stage fluorescent light microscope Leica DM6000 FS, and maintains the controlled sample state during the cryo imaging,” explains Ruwin Pandithage, Product Manager at Leica Microsystems. “Since all components of the system originate from Leica Microsystems, they are well-matched and perform smoothly in their workflow.”

Leica Microsystems cooperation partner Dr. John Briggs of EMBL Heidelberg, Germany, says: “This will provide a huge boost to our research. It will allow us to carry out cryo fluorescence microscopy easily, reliably and with good image quality, and to efficiently recover the sample for correlative cryo electron microscopy. This will make it possible to answer a whole range of exciting research questions.”

The system’s dedicated Leica HCX PL APO 50x / 0,90 CLEM objective enables researchers to define fluorescent-labeled target structures of a size up to 100 nm. It is apochromatically corrected and has a numerical aperture of 0.9. Its low working distance of 0.28 mm ensures high resolution cryo imaging with a maximum resolution of 364 nm. A transfer shuttle keeps the sample under cryo conditions and contamination-free throughout the workflow.

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Light MicroscopyLight microscopes or optical microscopes are used to visualize microscale objects under magnification, including cells, clinical specimens and materials. Lab equipment for light microscopy includes confocal microscopes, fluorescence microscopes, zoom and stereo microscopes. Microscope slides and imaging reagents are available for visualizing samples, as well as various microscope stages and incubators for large or temperature-sensitive samples. Find the best light microscopes in our peer-reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receive pricing direct from manufacturers.Electron MicroscopyElectron microscopes (EM) are used to create high-resolution images of samples at the nanoscale by means of an accelerated beam of electrons as a source of illumination. Types of electron microscope include scanning electron microscopes (SEM), transmission electron microscopes (TEM), scanning transmission electron microscopes (STEM) and cryo-electron microscopes. Focused ion beam (FIB) microscopes are useful for modifying or milling a sample surface with nanometer precision, as well as imaging. Find the best electron microscopes in our peer-reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receive pricing direct from manufacturers.CryopreservationFluorescence MicroscopyFluorescence microscopy has become an essential tool in biology, as well as in materials science. The application of many fluorochromes has made it possible to identify cells and sub-microscopic cellular components with a high degree of specificity. Using multiple fluorescence labels, different probes can simultaneously identify several target molecules.
Leica Microsystems Combines Advantages of Cryo Fixation, Fluorescence Light Microscopy and Electron Microscopy in One System