This lecture explains how electron microscopes work, why they are powerful for structural biology, how they compare to light microscopes, and what technological breakthroughs enabled the modern βresolution revolutionβ in cryo-EM.
There are two main types of electron microscopes:
π For high-resolution structural biology, TEM is used because the transmitted electrons can form detailed images of internal structure.
Key lens systems:
Both have:
| Feature | Light Microscopy | Electron Microscopy |
|---|---|---|
| Lenses | Glass lenses (fixed focal length) | Electromagnetic lenses (focal length adjustable via current) |
| Depth of field | Small | Large |
| Environment | Air | Ultra-high vacuum |
| Sample prep | Simple | Must be fixed / vitrified |
| Resolution limit | Limited by light wavelength | Limited by radiation damage & contrast |
In EM, changing lens current β changes focal length and magnification continuously (very flexible).
TEM requires ultra-high vacuum β otherwise electrons scatter and the beam becomes unstable.
But vacuum causes:
This allows proteins and complexes to be imaged without dehydration artifacts.
Electron beams destroy biological samples.
Therefore:
This balance is one of the central challenges in cryo-EM.
Resolution depends on wavelength:
This is orders of magnitude smaller, meaning angstrom-level resolution is theoretically possible.
However in biology, practical limits come from:
Electron microscopy spans a huge size range, for example:
Thus TEM can bridge cell biology β molecular β atomic structure.
Key milestones:
Modern designs still use many principles invented in the 1920β30s.
Typical accelerating voltages:
Higher voltage:
β Non-damaging β Easy to focus β Low resolution
β Atomic wavelength β Good penetration β Hard to focus (need diffraction + math reconstruction) β Radiation damage
β Even smaller wavelength β Can be focused with magnetic lenses β Poor penetration β sample must be very thin (<100 nm ideal ~30 nm) β Radiation damage
β Very low damage β Small wavelength β Hard to produce β Few facilities
Example: ESS neutron source in Sweden.
Major breakthroughs:
Huge improvement in resolution.
Essential for visualizing proteins.
Problem:
Solution:
Major contribution to high-resolution cryo-EM.
These allowed routine near-atomic structures of proteins.
β TEM enables atomic-level structural biology β Resolution is limited by radiation damage + contrast, not wavelength β Samples must be vitrified and extremely thin β Cryo-EM revolution came from detectors + computation + aberration correction β Electrons can be focused β unlike X-rays β Cryo-EM bridges the gap between cell biology and atomic structure