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Resolving exit strategies of mycobacteria by combining high-pressure freezing with 3D-correlative light and electron microscopy

Franzkoch, R.; Anand, A.; Breitsprecher, L.; Psathaki, O. E.; Barisch, C.

2023-04-24 cell biology
10.1101/2023.04.24.538041 bioRxiv
Show abstract

The infection course of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is highly dynamic and comprises sequential stages that require damaging and crossing of several membranes to enable the translocation of the bacteria into the cytosol or their escape from the host. Many important breakthroughs such as the restriction of vacuolar and cytosolic mycobacteria by the autophagy pathway and the recruitment of sophisticated host repair machineries to the Mycobacterium-containing vacuole have been gained in the Dictyostelium discoideum/M. marinum system. Despite the availability of well-established light and advanced electron microscopy techniques in this system, a correlative approach that integrates both methodologies with almost native ultrastructural preservation is still lacking at the moment. This is most likely due to the low ability of D. discoideum to adhere to surfaces, which results in cell loss even after fixation. To address this problem, we improved the adhesion of cells and developed a straightforward and convenient workflow for 3D-correlative light and electron microscopy. This approach includes high-pressure freezing, which is an excellent technique for preserving membranes. Thus, our method allows to monitor the ultrastructural aspects of vacuole escape which is of central importance for the survival and dissemination of bacterial pathogens.

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