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NEW DUAL BEAM FIB/SEM MICROSCOPE AVAILABLE FOR YOUR USEThe New York Structural Biology Center (NYSBC), to which your institution belongs, has recently acquired a new dual beam FIB/SEM microscope. This microscope is available to you, with NYSBC staff assistance, at no cost. Originally, this microscope was developed by the semi-conductor industry but is now being used with dramatic effect by the biological community. The FIB/SEM can reconstruct an entire cell at high resolution and make a movie -- a continuous series of slices as you move through the cell. This could have great benefits for cell biologists, virologists and neuroscientists. One application of the FIB/SEM is to create large-scale serial section reconstructions from resin-embedded tissues (e.g., 5x10x10 um). The sections are created in the microscope with a gallium ion beam and each section is generally ~10nm thick. The resolution is typically 5-10 nm – enough, for example, to distinguish the inner and outer membranes of mitochondria and to identify synaptic vesicles and the post-synaptic density. The process is automated and data collection takes a few days. Another application enables thinning frozen, non-stained samples for later use by traditional cryoelectron microscopy. NYSBC has a light microscope required for this process. A sample movie can be viewed at http://cryoem.nysbc.org/movie.mpg
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