posted on 2016-11-15, 00:00authored byClément
Y. J. Hémonnot, Christiane Ranke, Oliva Saldanha, Rita Graceffa, Johannes Hagemann, Sarah Köster
X-ray
imaging of intact biological cells is emerging as a complementary
method to visible light or electron microscopy. Owing to the high
penetration depth and small wavelength of X-rays, it is possible to
resolve subcellular structures at a resolution of a few nanometers.
Here, we apply scanning X-ray nanodiffraction in combination with
time-lapse bright-field microscopy to nuclei of 3T3 fibroblasts and
thus relate the observed structures to specific phases in the cell
division cycle. We scan the sample at a step size of 250 nm and analyze
the individual diffraction patterns according to a generalized Porod’s
law. Thus, we obtain information on the aggregation state of the nuclear
DNA at a real space resolution on the order of the step size and in
parallel structural information on the order of few nanometers. We
are able to distinguish nucleoli, heterochromatin, and euchromatin
in the nuclei and follow the compaction and decompaction during the
cell division cycle.