Polyvinyl alcohol coating: an improvement of the freeze‐fracture technique
- 1 March 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Microscopy
- Vol. 121 (3) , 283-287
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2818.1981.tb01225.x
Abstract
A modification of the freeze‐fracture technique, involving the coating of tissues with polyvinyl alcohol (Vinol) prior to freezing, is described. This results in substantial improvements over the more conventional method in which material is cryoprotected and frozen in buffered glycerol alone. The high vacuum is produced more rapidly and can be better than in the absence of vinol and the speed of replica recuperation is greatly increased.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intercellular Junctions In Fanft‐Induced Carcinomas Of Rat Urinary Bladder In Tissue Culture: In Situ Thin‐Section, Freeze‐Fracture, And Scanning Electron Microscopy StudiesJournal of Microscopy, 1979
- Decoration of specific sites on freeze-fractured membranes.The Journal of cell biology, 1978
- Polymeric cryoproteetants in the preservation of biological ultrastructureJournal of Microscopy, 1977
- Freeze-fracture of monolayer cultures.The Journal of cell biology, 1977
- Freeze-fracture techniques and applications to the structural analysis of the mammalian plasma membranePublished by Elsevier ,1977
- Temperature and contamination dependent freeze-etch images of frozen water and glycerol solutionsJournal of Ultrastructure Research, 1971
- A SIMPLE FREEZE-FRACTURE REPLICATION METHOD FOR ELECTRON MICROSCOPYThe Journal of cell biology, 1966
- A NEW FREEZING-ULTRAMICROTOMEThe Journal of cell biology, 1961
- ELECTRON MICROSCOPY OF STRUCTURAL DETAIL IN FROZEN BIOLOGICAL SPECIMENSThe Journal of cell biology, 1957