Abstract

Summary High pressure freezing and freeze substitution (HPF‐FS) were used to prepare barley ( Hordeum vulgare L. cv Himalaya) aleurone protoplasts for transmission electron microscopy (TEM). We show that HPF‐FS is superior to conventional chemical fixation and dehydration techniques for the preservation of cellular fine structure and antigenicity of proteins in barley aleurone protoplasts. HPF‐FS extracted fewer proteins from the cytosol and organelles of aleurone protoplasts and maintained the details of cellular structure. The cortical cytoskeleton, made up of microtubules, was observed for the first time by TEM in barley aleurone protoplasts prepared by HPF‐FS. Organelles such as protein storage vacuoles retained their proteinaceous contents, and other cellular organelles (including the Golgi apparatus, the nucleus and mitochondria) were also well preserved in protoplasts fixed by HPF‐FS. Antibodies to the vacuolar enzyme nuclease I, the tonoplast aquaporin α‐TIP and the glyoxysomal enzyme malate synthase showed that the antigenicity of organellar enzymes and membrane proteins was preserved in cells prepared by HPF‐FS. We conclude that HPF‐FS is superior to chemical fixation for the preparation of plant protoplasts for TEM and is the method of choice for the preservation of aleurone protoplasts for structural and immunochemical studies.

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