Journal of Structural Biology, Vol.169, No.3, 331-341, 2010
Radiation damage effects at four specimen temperatures from 4 to 100 K
Radiation damage is the primary factor that limits resolution in electron cryo-microscopy (cryo-EM) of frozen-hydrated biological samples. Negative effects of radiation damage are attenuated by cooling specimens to cryogenic temperatures using liquid nitrogen or liquid helium. We have examined the relationship between specimen temperature and radiation damage across a broad spectrum of resolution by analyzing images of frozen-hydrated catalase crystal at four specimen temperatures: 4, 25, 42, and 100 K. For each temperature, "exposure series" were collected consisting of consecutive images of the same area of sample, each with 10 e(-)/angstrom(2) exposure per image. Radiation damage effects were evaluated by examining the correlation between cumulative exposure and normalized amplitudes or IQ values of Bragg peaks across a broad range of resolution (4.0-173.5 angstrom). Results indicate that for sub-nanometer resolution, liquid nitrogen specimen temperature (100 K) provides the most consistent high-quality data while yielding statistically equivalent protection from radiation damage compared to the three lower temperatures. At lower resolution, suitable for tomography, intermediate temperatures (25 or 42 K) may provide a modest improvement in cryo-protection without introducing deleterious effects evident at 4 K. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
Keywords:Cryo-EM;Electron cryo-microscopy;Electron crystallography;Radiation damage;Dose tolerance;Exposure tolerance;Liquid helium;Liquid nitrogen