We've updated our Privacy Policy to make it clearer how we use your personal data. We use cookies to provide you with a better experience. You can read our Cookie Policy here.

Advertisement

FEI Announces New Tecnai Arctica TEM for Structural Biology Research

Listen with
Speechify
0:00
Register for free to listen to this article
Thank you. Listen to this article using the player above.

Want to listen to this article for FREE?

Complete the form below to unlock access to ALL audio articles.

Read time: 1 minute

FEI has announced the availability of its Tecnai Arctica™ transmission electron microscope (TEM) for structural biology research.

The Tecnai Arctica incorporates sophisticated automation, pioneered on FEI’s flagship Titan Krios™ TEM, to elucidate the three-dimensional (3D) structure of biological macromolecules and molecular complexes.

With the addition of the Tecnai Arctica, FEI now offers a portfolio of structural biology workflows to accommodate a broad range of facilities and budgets.

The Tecnai Arctica is specifically designed for structural biologists who are focused on increasing productivity and reducing cost-of-ownership.

The system’s high throughput and easy-to-use, highly-automated workflow, combined with its lower acquisition cost, minimize the overall cost of analysis per structure.

“Most proteins act together with other proteins in multi-molecular complexes, and understanding relationships between structure and function within these complexes is the key to understanding all living systems,” said Peter Fruhstorfer, vice president of FEI’s Life Sciences Business.

Fruhstorfer continued, “Traditional tools, such as X-ray diffraction and nuclear magnetic resonance, are limited to certain classes of molecules. Cryo TEMs, like our Titan Krios, and now the Tecnai Arctica, can look at virtually any molecule or complex of molecules in a native, fully-hydrated state. We believe that the role of cryo TEM in structural biology analysis, which has expanded dramatically in recent years, should continue to grow at an accelerating rate as instruments like the Tecnai Arctica TEM make the technology accessible to a wider range of researchers.”

Much of the recent progress in cryo TEM-based structural analysis uses a technique known as single particle analysis (SPA), which combines images of tens or hundreds of thousands of nominally identical particles to derive a high resolution, low noise, 3D model.

The particles are first rapidly frozen in physiological solution to preserve their native structure. The Tecnai Arctica is part of a tightly-integrated, start-to-finish workflow, comprising cryo-sample preparation, data acquisition and analysis and final visualization, which greatly enhances the speed and efficiency of analysis.

Its cryo-sample autoloader, combined with automated target identification and low dose imaging, enable unattended acquisition of large SPA data sets that are practically impossible to acquire with manual methods.

Its streamlined user interface and extensive automation of routine operations and set up procedures significantly lower the threshold for operator expertise.

“FEI’s Tecnai TEMs are a well-proven platform with over 1,000 systems deployed globally in life sciences, materials science, nanotechnology, semiconductor and data storage applications. While the Tecnai is one of our most widely-used TEM platform, The Titan Krios remains the leading TEM for structural biologists who require the highest resolution over the broadest range of samples for advanced analytical techniques, such as electron tomography,” added Fruhstorfer.