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Use of radial density plots to calibrate image magnification for frozen-hydrated specimens
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-3991(93)90110-jAbstract
Accurate magnification calibration for transmission electron microscopy is best achieved with the use of appropriate standards and an objective calibration technique. We have developed a reliable method for calibrating the magnification of images from frozen-hydrated specimens. Invariant features in radial density plots of a standard are compared with the corresponding features in a "defocused" X-ray model of the same standard. Defocused X-ray models were generated to mimic the conditions of cryo-electron microscopy. The technique is demonstrated with polyoma virus, which was used as an internal standard to calibrate micrographs of bovine papilloma virus type 1 and bacteriophage phi X174. Calibrations of the micrographs were estimated to be accurate to 0.35%-0.5%. Accurate scaling of a three-dimensional structure allows additional calibrations to be made with radial density plots computed from two- or three-dimensional data.
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