Automated Acquisition of Cryo Electron Micrographs Using Leginon
- Nebojsa Jojic ,
- Bridget Carragher
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Molecular microscopy is one of the most important structural approaches in cell biological investigations and can provide insight into complex biological questions that no other technique can provide. Currently, the technique typically requires the acquisition of very large numbers of transmission electron micrographs from frozen hydrated specimens using low dose techniques. The field is constrained by manual data acquisition methods that are slow, labor-intensive and result in a very low percentage of suitable images. We have developed a system, called Leginon, for automatically acquiring images from a transmission electron microscope1 (opens in new tab),2 (opens in new tab). Our first prototype of this system demonstrated that we could acquire 1000 high magnification images per day from negatively stained catalase crystals. We have now extended this system to acquire low dose images of specimens embedded in vitreous ice.