Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc.

RAPID COMMUNICATION

Application of Quantum Dots as Probes for Correlative Fluorescence, Conventional, and Energy-filtered Transmission Electron Microscopy

Rozalia Nisman, Graham Dellaire, Ying Ren, Ren Li and David P. Bazett–Jones

Programme in Cell Biology, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Correspondence to: David P. Bazett–Jones, 555 University Avenue, Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada. E-mail: dbjones{at}sickkids.ca


    Summary
 Top
 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 
Luminescent semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) are a new class of fluorescent label with wide-ranging applications for cell imaging. The electron density and elemental composition of these materials permit the extension of their use as probes in conventional electron microscopy (TEM) and energy-filtered TEM (EFTEM). Here we illustrate the feasibility of using streptavidin-conjugated QDs as TEM tags by labeling a nuclear protein on cell sections and obtaining correlative fluorescence and TEM data. We also show that QD probes can be employed in conjunction with immunogold for co-localization of proteins at the ultrastructural level. Furthermore, by obtaining cadmium elemental maps of CdSe/ZnS QDs distributed on a nuclear structure, we demonstrate the potential of QDs for co-localization of multiple proteins when used in combination with EFTEM.

(J Histochem Cystochem 52:13–18, 2004)

Key Words: quantum dots • energy-filtered transmission • electron microscopy • electron spectroscopic imaging • multiple labeling • protein co-localization • cell structure • immunogold


    Introduction
 Top
 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 
A CRITICAL REQUIREMENT in molecular cell biology is the localization of specific biomolecules in cells and tissues. Immunofluorescence labeling is the standard approach, but fluorescence-based imaging is limited in spatial resolution by the wavelength of light. Hence, the application of transmission electron microscopy (TEM) in conjunction with immunolabeling has proved to be advantageous for high-resolution structural studies (Boisvert et al. 2000Go). The prevalent strategy for immunolocalization via TEM is to employ antibodies conjugated with colloidal gold of various dimensions (Jensen and Norrild 1999Go; Ueda et al. 2000Go). The recent development of luminescent semiconductor nanocrystals, also termed quantum dots (QDs), for immunodetection (Chan and Nie 1998Go; Goldman et al. 2002Go; Wu et al. 2002Go), raises the possibility of their use as probes for EM. Luminescent nanocrystals have the potential to become widely employed for cell imaging due to their narrow, size-tunable emission spectra, high quantum yield, and resistance to photobleaching (Hines and Guyot–Sionnest 1996Go; Dabbousi et al. 1997Go). Their fluorescent and electron-dense properties can also be used to advantage in correlative microscopy, in which an epitope of interest is identified at the light microscope (LM) level and subsequently characterized at high resolution with TEM. Furthermore, QDs are prime candidates as tags for EFTEM, also known as electron spectroscopic imaging (ESI) (Hendzel and Bazett–Jones 1996Go). ESI can be used to generate elemental maps with high resolution and detection sensitivity and has been employed to distinguish nucleic acid- from protein-based structures in cell compartments (Bazett–Jones et al. 1999Go). It can therefore be used to map the distribution of QDs, based on their elemental composition, in cell and tissue components.

To illustrate the value of QDs as probes for EM studies of cell components, the nuclear promyelocytic leukemia (PML) protein was chosen as the target biomolecule. The localization of PML protein in discrete subnuclear bodies has been well characterized with both fluorescence and electron microscopy (Boisvert et al. 2000Go,2001Go).


    Materials and Methods
 Top
 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 
Reagents
All reagents were purchased from Sigma–Aldrich (St Louis, MO). Qdot 605 streptavidin conjugate was purchased from Quantum Dot (Hayward, CA).

Cell Growth, Fixation, and Embedding
HEp-2 PML I (GFP-PML I/IV stable cell line; a kind gift from Dr. J. Taylor) cells were cultured per ATCC recommendations. Cells were seeded onto coverslips, cultured overnight in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) (GIBCO; Carlsbad, CA) with 500 µg/ml G418 sulfate (Calbiochem; San Diego, CA) and 10% FBS (Invitrogen; Carlsbad, CA), then fixed in a 1% paraformaldehyde and 2% glutaraldehyde mix in PBS (pH 7.5) at ambient temperature for 10 min and rinsed three times with PBS. Then the cells were dehydrated with a graded ethanol series, consisting of 30%, 50%, and 70% ethanol at 10 min each. Cells were then incubated in a 2:1 mix of 70% ethanol:LR White (Electron Microscopy Sciences; Fort Washington, PA) for 10 min and then rinsed twice with LR White. The coverslip was placed cell side down onto a mold filled with LR White. The assembly was inserted into a vacuum chamber and placed in a 60C oven for 24 hr.

Thin Sectioning
The block of resin attached to the coverslip was removed from the mold, placed in liquid nitrogen briefly, and then peeled off the coverslip. A selected area of the block was excised, glued on a bullet of resin, and mounted in the ultramicrotome for sectioning. Sections 60–70-nm thick were picked up on 400-mesh nickel grids.

Post-section Labeling
For all incubations, drops of solution were placed on a sheet of Parafilm and grids were floated on the drops, section side down. All antibody incubations were performed for 1 hr, and all blocking and rinsing steps were performed for 10 min. The sections were blocked twice with a solution of 0.5% BSA, 0.15% glycine, then three times with 2% BSA in PBS (incubation buffer). The sections were then incubated with a rabbit polyclonal anti-PML antibody (Chemicon; Temecula, CA) diluted in incubation buffer, then rinsed three times with the incubation buffer. For immunogold labeling, a goat anti-rabbit IgG–10-nm gold antibody (Electron Microscopy Sciences) was used for the secondary antibody incubation. After rinsing three times with the blocking buffer, goat anti-rabbit–Cy3 was employed to fluorescently label the remaining sites on the primary antibody. The sections to be labeled with QDs were incubated with a biotin-SP-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit biotinylated antibody (Jackson ImmunoResearch; West Grove, PA) and rinsed as before. The Qdot 605 conjugate was incubated at 10 nM for 30 min with the Qdot Incubation Buffer (Quantum Dot). The section was then placed on a drop of this solution. After the immunogold or QD incubation, the samples were rinsed once with PBS for 10 min. Grids were then placed on drops of distilled water (Invitrogen; Grand Island, NY) four times for 10 min each and finally air-dried. For the double-labeling experiment, the rabbit anti-NH2-terminal CBP antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology; Santa Cruz, CA) was incubated concurrently with a mouse monoclonal anti-PML antibody 5E10 (a kind gift from R. van Driel). Immunogold was targeted against PML and QD against CBP.

Staining
Staining was performed by placing grids on drops of 1% uranyl acetate (Electron Microscopy Sciences) solution for 5 min. The grids were then rinsed three times on drops of distilled water.

Fluorescence Microscopy
Thin sections supported on grids were placed on glass slides and covered with coverslips for examination at high magnification (x63) with a Leica DMRA2 epifluorescence microscope (Leica Microsystems; Wetzlar, Germany). Digital images were collected with a 14-bit CCD camera. Images were captured and processed with Open Lab 3.0.7 software (Improvision; Boston, MA). The fluorescence filter set used for Cy3 was also well suited for imaging the Qdot 605 tag.

Electron Microscopy
Before ESI analysis the sections were coated with a carbon film approximately 3 nm thick to stabilize the section from physical distortions caused by the electron beam (Ren et al. 2003Go). The regions of interest were imaged with a Tecnai 20 (FEI; Eindhoven, The Netherlands) transmission electron microscope equipped with an electron imaging spectrometer (Gatan; Pleasanton, CA) and operated at 200 kV. Elemental maps were generated by dividing the element-enhanced post-edge image by the pre-edge image after alignment by cross-correlation. Net ratio elemental maps were produced from pre- and post-edge images recorded at 120 and 155 eV (LII,III edge) for phosphorus, edges recorded at 385 and 415 eV (K edge) for nitrogen (Bazett–Jones and Hendzel 1999Go), and edges collected at 415 and 510 eV (MIV,V edge) for cadmium. The recording times required to obtain the pre-edge and post-edge images are in the range of 10–30 sec. The images were collected with a cooled CCD camera. Because the images are captured at a resolution of 1024 x 1024 pixels, they have a pixelated appearance when inspected closely or zoomed. The images were processed using Digital Micrograph software (Gatan).


    Results
 Top
 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 
The PML protein was detected with a commercially available streptavidin-conjugated QD, Qdot 605. The dimensions of this QD conjugate necessitated post-section labeling because the 10–15-nm diameter particles are incapable of penetrating the nuclear envelope. Pre-embedment labeling of nuclear components is possible with "harsher" fixatives such as acetone (Wu et al. 2002Go) or methanol because these agents remove the nuclear membrane. However, an undesirable consequence is the significant disruption of the structure and the relative position of chromatin and other nuclear components. To preserve the nuclear ultrastructure, we employed fixation with paraformaldehyde and glutaraldehyde, followed by embedding, sectioning, and immunodetection. With correlative fluorescence and electron microscopy, PML bodies are initially located in thin sections by the fluorescence signal observed in the light microscope. These identified structures are then imaged at high resolution by conventional TEM, with heavy atom staining, or by ESI, with or without staining. Fluorescence microscopy and low-magnification TEM images are used to identify PML bodies in the cell nucleus (Figures 1A and 1D) , and PML bodies are then imaged at higher resolution by TEM. The distribution of PML protein in the nuclear body is indicated with immunogold (Figures 1B and 1C) or QDs (Figures 1E and 1F). The nuclear bodies in this cell line form easily recognized ring structures. In the brightfield images, the QDs are recognized by a lower mass density relative to the 10-nm gold spheres, yet they are clearly visible under conventional operating TEM conditions at the appropriate magnification. The oblong shape and lower electron density of the QD nanocrystal relative to gold lead to the impression that the QD is much smaller relative to the gold sphere, even though the length of the QD particle is comparable to the diameter of the gold sphere. The 10–15-nm diameter of Qdot 605, as specified by the manufacturer, includes the metal core/shell, a polymer coating, and an outer layer of streptavidin. However, in brightfield TEM, only the metal component is of sufficient electron density to yield contrast. Because the metal component of the QD is smaller than that of the 10-nm gold probe, the object appears smaller in the image. The manufacturer of the 10-nm gold probe specifies only the diameter of the gold component. The attached antibody also increases the physical diameter of the probe, but this dimension is not specified.



View larger version (146K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 1

Detection of PML bodies with 10-nm gold and quantum dots. (A,D) Overlays of low-magnification TEM and fluorescence images for HEp-2 PML I cells labeled with 10-nm gold and QDs, respectively. On gold-labeled sections, a Cy3 secondary antibody was used, after incubation with gold, for generation of fluorescence signal. Bright spots are PML bodies. Bar = 1 µm. (B,E) Enlarged TEM views of the gold-labeled PML body and the QD-labeled PML body, highlighted by boxes in A and D, respectively. Bar shown in A = 100 nm. (C,F) High-magnification TEM micrographs of the gold and QD-labeled PML bodies, respectivly. The QDs in F are highlighted with arrows. Bar shown in A = 50 nm. All sections were stained with uranyl acetate.

 
The characterization of the PML body by ESI is a prime example of the capability of this imaging technique to provide chemical and structural information about subcellular components. Nitrogen and phosphorus elemental maps of the PML body reveal a biochemically distinct substructure (Figures 2B and 2C) . The ring-shaped core of the nuclear body is enriched in nitrogen and depleted in phosphorus. This indicates that the ring structure is composed primarily of protein and is devoid of nucleic acid components, such as chromatin and RNA. We can exploit the elemental composition of QDs to our advantage if an ionization edge of one of its elemental components is resolvable from neighboring ionization edges. The core material of Qdot 605 is CdSe, and the MIV,V ionization edge of cadmium allows us to obtain a cadmium elemental map without interference from the nitrogen signal (Figure 2D). The contribution of the nitrogen K edge ionization is excluded by careful selection of the region of the energy loss spectrum chosen to produce the cadmium pre-edge and post-edge images. Nitrogen pre- and post-ionization signals were collected at 385 and 415 eV, whereas those for cadmium were collected at 415 and 510 eV.



View larger version (145K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 2

ESI of nuclear components and quantum dots. (A) Overlay of fluorescence and low-magnification ESI electron micrographs collected at 155 eV. Bright spots are PML bodies. Bar = 0.7 µm. High-magnification nitrogen (B) and phosphorus (C) maps indicate that the PML body is predominantly nitrogen-based. (D) Cadmium map of QD probes for the PML protein at the same magnification. Bar shown in A = 100 nm. (E) Higher-magnification ESI of QDs, showing the distribution of discrete QDs within the PML body. (F) Cadmium map of QDs bound to a PML body in a stained section, at high magnification. Bar shown in A = 50 nm.

 
An ESI elemental map of QDs can also be obtained from a sample lightly stained with uranyl acetate (Figure 2F). The cadmium signal-to-background ratio is lower than in the unstained section (Figure 2E) because of the background signal generated by the uranyl acetate stain. However, if stains must be employed for ease of cell and substructure identification, this example illustrates that ESI is still fully capable of detecting the cadmium-based nanocrystal tag on the basis of its chemical composition.

The electron dose for detection via ESI is on the order of 300 electrons/Å2 for the pre- or post-edge images. This is approximately a 100-fold increase from the dose used for brightfield imaging. Terminal mass loss occurs within the first second of imaging and no further loss occurs during image collection. Nevertheless, damage of structural detail at the level that is required is not a major problem. An order of magnitude greater dose exposure would be required before physical damage from the beam would become apparent. The integrity of the plastic sections is enhanced with a carbon coating 2–3 nm thick.

We observed that colloidal gold used for immunodetection can be distinguished from the QDs on the basis of mass density and shape. This provides an opportunity for multiple labeling in EM studies. As an example of this application, we investigated the localization of the transcriptional co-activator CREB binding protein (CBP) with respect to the PML body, using a double-labeling technique. We have observed with ESI and in situ nanogold labeling that the CBP protein localizes primarily to the periphery of PML bodies and not to their core (our unpublished data). Here we labeled PML protein with an immunogold probe and CBP with a QD–streptavidin probe directed against a biotinylated secondary antibody (Figure 3) . With sufficient magnification, the gold probes can be easily distinguished from QDs on the basis of electron density and shape. In the overlay of the high contrast brightfield image, which clearly shows the QD and gold distributions on the nitrogen elemental map (Figure 3C), we observe that a domain on the periphery of the ring-shaped PML body is enriched in CBP. The PML protein, as indicated by the colloidal gold spheres, is distributed throughout the ring structure.



View larger version (73K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 3

Double labeling of PML and CBP with gold and quantum dots. (A) Nitrogen map of a PML body. Bar = 170 nm. (B) Brightfield image of a region of the PML body highlighted by the box in A, distinguishing 10-nm gold (dark circles, PML) and QDs (oblong shapes, CBP). (C) The brightfield image is overlaid on the nitrogen map of the highlighted area. The gold particles are false-colored white and the QDs yellow for visual emphasis. The overlay image shows the distribution of CBP in a nitrogen-based structure, which is on the periphery of the PML body. Bar shown in A = 100 nm.

 

    Discussion
 Top
 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 
These data demonstrate the utility of the nanocrystals in conjunction with immunogold as probes for multiple-labeling EM techniques. The practical value of using QDs as ESI probes is twofold. First, because staining of cell sections is not required, the probe can be used in conjunction with elemental mapping of nitrogen and phosphorus in cell components. Elemental mapping yields far greater structural information relative to conventional TEM of stained sections. Because ESI does not require heavy atom stains, the artifacts associated with stains are avoided, such as the lack of uniformity of staining of structures that differ in biochemical composition. Second, the composition of QDs can be tuned so that elemental mapping can be employed to distinguish several probes, and this leads to the potential of multiple labeling of cell components.

The full potential of this class of probes is yet to be realized, because the ability to use chemical signatures with ESI to determine the co-localization of subcellular components hinges on the development of QDs of various chemical compositions. The core/shell configuration offers the choice of several atomic constituents, although the larger number of atoms in the core of nanocrystals results in an inherent advantage of the core vs the shell component. For the CdSe/ZnS material, cadmium provides the highest ESI sensitivity. The determinant criteria for an element suitable for energy-filtered mapping are the energy and the profile of its ionization edge. Ionization edges far from the zero loss peak are less favored than edges in the low-energy loss region of the spectrum. This is due to higher beam exposures required for edges that are farther out in the spectrum. Therefore, elemental maps of Cd are easier to obtain than those for Se. Moreover, the ionization edge should not overlap with the edge of another element of interest within the sample. Nanocrystals composed of CdTe (Wuister et al. 2003Go), GaSb (Muller–Kirsch et al. 2003Go), InGaAs/GaAs (Guffarth et al. 2003Go), and Fe2O3 (Lu et al. 2003Go) have been synthesized, and Te, Sb, In, As, and Fe are all elements that have appropriate ionization edges for obtaining ESI maps. Furthermore, doping nanocrystals with transition metal ions suitable for ESI, to achieve materials such as Co2+-doped ZnAl2O4 (Duan et al. 2003Go) and Mn2+-doped CdS/ZnS (Yang and Holloway 2003Go), is another method of creating novel probes. Doping techniques can be adjusted to produce up to 3–7 atom % of the dopant in a nanocrystal (Zhuang et al. 2003Go). For a nanocrystal consisting of 1500 atoms, 2% of the dopant would result in up to 30 atoms, which is theoretically within the limit of detection of ESI, for an element of high ESI sensitivity (Bazett–Jones and Hendzel 1999Go).

As conditions for nanocrystal growth are optimized for a variety of elemental components and bioconjugation of these materials becomes routine, QDs will attain prominence in the arsenal of probes for high-resolution mapping of biochemicals in macromolecular complexes visualized in vitro and in situ by ESI.


    Acknowledgments
 
Supported by an operating grant to DPB–J from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council. DPB–J holds a Canada Research Chair in Molecular and Cellular Imaging. GD is a Senior Postdoctoral Fellow of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR).


    Footnotes
 
Received for publication June 30, 2003; accepted September 22, 2003


    Literature Cited
 Top
 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 

Bazett–Jones DP, Hendzel MJ (1999) Electron spectroscopic imaging of chromatin. Methods 17:188–200[Medline]

Bazett–Jones DP, Hendzel MJ, Kruhlak MJ (1999) Stoichiometric analysis of protein- and nucleic acid-based structures in the cell nucleus. Micron 30:151–157[Medline]

Boisvert FM, Hendzel MJ, Bazett–Jones DP (2000) Promyelocytic leukemia (PML) nuclear bodies are protein structures that do not accumulate RNA. J Cell Biol 148:283–292[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Boisvert FM, Kruhlak MJ, Box AK, Hendzel MJ, Bazett-Jones DP (2001) The transcription coactivator CBP is a dynamic component of the promyelocytic leukemia nuclear body. J Cell Biol 152:1099–1106[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Chan CW, Nie S (1998) Quantum dot bioconjugates for ultrasensitive nonisotopic detection. Science 281:2016–2018[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Dabbousi BO, Rodriguez–Viejo J, Mikulec FV, Heine JR, Mattoussi H, Ober R, Jensen KF, et al. (1997) (CdSe)ZnS Core-shell quantum dots: synthesis and characterization of a size series of highly luminescent nanocrystallites. J Phys Chem 101:9463–9475

Duan XL, Yuan DR, Cheng XF, Sun ZH, Sun HQ, Xu D, Lu MK (2003) Spectroscopic properties of Co2+: ZnAl2O4 nanocrystals in sol-gel derived glass ceramics. J Phys Chem Solids 64:1021–1025

Goldman ER, Anderson GP, Tran PT, Mattoussi H, Charles PT, Mauro JM (2002) Conjugation of luminescent quantum dots with antibodies using an engineered adaptor protein to provide new reagents for fluoroimmunoassays. Anal Chem 74:841–847[Medline]

Guffarth F, Heitz R, Geller M, Kepteyn C, Born H, Sellin R, Hoffmann A, et al. (2003) Radiation hardness of InGaAs/GaAs quantum dots. Appl Phys Lett 82:1941–1943

Hines MA, Guyot–Sionnest P (1996) Synthesis and characterization of strongly luminescing ZnS-capped CdSe nanocrystals. J Phys Chem 100:468–471

Hendzel MJ, Bazett–Jones DP (1996) Probing nuclear ultrastructure by electron spectroscopic imaging. J Microsc 182:1–14[Medline]

Jensen HL, Norrild B (1999) Easy and reliable double-immunogold labeling of Herpes simplex virus type-1 infected cells using primary monoclonal antibodies and studied by cryosection electron microscopy. Histochem J 31:525–533[Medline]

Lu J, Fan JD, Xu RS, Roy SJ, Ali N, Gao Y (2003) Synthesis of alkyl sulfonate/alcohol-protected gamma-Fe2O3 nanocrystals with narrow size distributions. J Colloid Interface Sci 258:427–431[Medline]

Muller–Kirsch L, Ledentsov NN, Sellin R, Pohl UW, Bimberg D, Hausler I, Kirmse H, et al. (2003) GaSb quantum dot growth using InAs quantum dot stressors. J Crystal Growth 248:333–338

Ren Y, Kruhlak MJ, Bazett–Jones DP (2003) Same serial section correlative light and energy-filtered transmission electron microscopy. J Histochem Cytochem 51:605–612[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Ueda J, Wentz–Hunter KK, Cheng EL, Fukuchi T, Abe H, Yue BYJT (2000) Ultrastructural localization of myocilin in human trabecular meshwork cells and tissues. J Histochem Cytochem 48:1321–1329[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Wu X, Liu H, Liu J, Haley KN, Treadway JA, Larson JP, Ge N, et al. (2002) Immunofluorescent labeling of cancer marker Her2 and other cellular targets with semiconductor quantum dots. Nature Biotechnol 21:41–46

Wuister SF, van Driel F, Meijerink A (2003) Luminescence and growth of CdTe quantum dots and clusters. Phys Chem Chem Phys 5:1253–1258

Yang H, Holloway PH (2003) Enhanced photoluminescence from CdS: Mn/ZnS core/shell quantum dots. Appl Phys Lett 82:1965–1967

Zhuang J, Zhang X, Wang G, Li D, Yang W, Li T (2003) Synthesis of water-soluble ZnS:Mn2+ nanocrystals by using mercaptopropionic acid as a stabilizer. J Mater Chem 13:1853–1857