The 3-dimensional ultrastructure of mouse renal glomeruli under
normal
haemodynamic conditions was
studied by scanning electron microscopy using an in vivo cryotechnique
followed by freeze-substitution, and
compared with glomeruli prepared by conventional fixation methods.
Mouse kidneys were frozen with a
cryoknife apparatus and a liquid isopentane-propane mixture (−193°C).
Surface areas of the frozen tissues
were freeze-fractured with a scalpel in liquid nitrogen. The specimens
were routinely freeze-substituted,
freeze-dried, ion-sputtered, and then observed in a scanning electron
microscope at an accelerating voltage
of 5 kV. Renal glomeruli showed good ultrastructural preservation of
the surface tissues. Podocytes with
interdigitating foot processes covering capillary loops exhibited smooth
surface contours and their cell
surfaces were arranged more tightly than those seen by the conventional
fixation method. Filtration slits
between foot processes were found to be narrow. The internal structure
of the glomerular tuft was seen in
the freeze-fracture faces. The capillary lumen with variously shaped
erythrocytes was kept open in frozen
glomeruli under normal blood circulation conditions. The ultrastructure
of renal glomeruli, as revealed by
the in vivo cryotechnique with freeze-substitution, appears to be closer
to that of the living state.