Core Practical 5: Light Microscopy (Edexcel International A Level Biology): Revision Note
Microscope Images
Many biological structures are too small to be seen by the naked eye
Optical, or light, microscopes are an invaluable tool for scientists as they allow for tissues, cells and organelles to be seen and studied
Light is directed through a thin layer of biological material that is supported on a glass slide
This light is focused through several lenses so that an image is visible through the eyepiece
The magnifying power of the microscope can be increased by rotating the higher power objective lens into place
Preparation of microscope slides
The key components of an optical microscope are
The eyepiece lens
The objective lenses
The stage
The light source
The coarse and fine focus
Other tools that may be used
Forceps
Scissors
Scalpel
Coverslip
Slides
Pipette
Staining solution
The components of an optical microscope
Method
Preparing a slide using a liquid specimen
Add a few drops of the sample to the slide using a pipette
Cover the liquid / smear with a coverslip and gently press down to remove air bubbles
Wear gloves to ensure there is no cross-contamination of foreign cells
Methods of preparing a microscope slide using a solid specimen
Take care when using sharp objects and wear gloves to prevent the stain from dying your skin
Use scissors or a scalpel to cut a small sample of the tissue
Use forceps to peel away or cut a very thin layer of cells from the tissue sample to be placed on the slide
The tissue needs to be thin so that the light from the microscope can pass through
Apply a stain to make cells more visible
Gently place a coverslip on top and press down to remove any air bubbles
Some tissue samples need to be treated with chemicals to kill cells or make the tissue rigid
This involves fixing the specimen using the preservative formaldehyde, dehydrating it using a series of ethanol solutions, impregnating it with paraffin or resin for support and then cutting thin slices from the specimen
The paraffin is removed from the slices and a stain is applied before the specimen is mounted and a coverslip is applied
Slide Preparation Table
Using a microscope
When using an optical microscope always start with the low power objective lens
It is easier to find what you are looking for in the field of view
This helps to prevent damage to the lens or coverslip in case the stage has been raised too high
Preventing the dehydration of tissue
The thin layers of material placed on slides can dry up rapidly
Adding a drop of water to the specimen beneath the coverslip can prevent the cells from being damaged by dehydration
Unclear or blurry images
Switch to the lower power objective lens and try using the coarse focus to get a clearer image
Consider whether the specimen sample is thin enough for light to pass through to see the structures clearly
There could be cross-contamination with foreign cells or bodies
Limitations
The size of cells or structures of tissues may appear inconsistent in different specimen slides
Cell structures are 3D and the different tissue samples will have been cut at different planes resulting in this inconsistencies when viewed on a 2D slide
Optical microscopes do not have the same magnification power as other types of microscopes and so there are some structures that cannot be seen
The treatment of specimens when preparing slides could alter the structure of cells
Drawing cells
To record the observations seen under the microscope, or from photomicrographs taken, a labelled biological drawing is often made
Biological drawings are line drawings that show specific features that have been observed when the specimen was viewed
There are a number of rules or conventions that are followed when making a biological drawing
The drawing must have a title
The magnification under which the observations shown by the drawing are made must be recorded
A sharp pencil should be used
Drawings should be on plain white paper
Lines should be clear, single lines with no sketching
No shading
The drawing should take up as much of the space on the page as possible
Well-defined structures should be drawn
The drawing should be made with proper proportions
Label lines should not cross or have arrowheads and should connect directly to the part of the drawing being labelled
Label lines should ideally be kept to one side of the drawing in parallel to the top of the page, and should be drawn with a ruler
Only visible structures should be drawn; not structures that the viewer thinks they should be able to see!
Drawings of cells are typically made when visualizing cells at a higher magnification power
An example of a cellular drawing taken from a high-power image of phloem tissue
Plan drawings that show the arrangement of cells within a tissue or organ are typically made using samples viewed under lower magnifications
Individual cells are never drawn in a plan diagram
An example of a tissue plan diagram drawn from a low-power image of a transverse section of a root. Note that there is no cell detail present.
Measurements of Microscopic Images
Magnification is how many times bigger the image of a specimen observed is in comparison to the actual, real-life size of the specimen
A light microscope has two types of lens:
An eyepiece lens, which often has a magnification of x10
A series of (usually 3) objective lenses, each with a different magnification
To calculate the total magnification, the magnification of the eyepiece lens and the objective lens are multiplied together:
total magnification = eyepiece lens magnification x objective lens magnification
The magnification (M) of an object can also be calculated if both the size of the image (I), and the actual size of the specimen (A), is known
magnification = image size actual size
Remember to ensure that the image size (I) and the actual size (A) of the specimen have the same units before doing the calculation
The equation for calculating magnification can be rearranged to calculate either actual size, image size, or magnification.
Worked Example
An image of an animal cell is 30 mm in diameter and it has been magnified by a factor of x3000.
What is the actual diameter of the cell?
Using an eyepiece graticule & stage micrometer
A graticule is a small disc that has an engraved ruler
It can be placed into the eyepiece of a microscope to act as a ruler in the field of view, so is sometimes known as an eyepiece graticule
As an eyepiece graticule has no fixed units it must be calibrated for the objective lens that is in use
The graticule in the eyepiece remains the same size when the magnification of the microscope is altered, so recalibration is needed at each viewing magnification
Calibration of the eyepiece graticule is done a microscope slide with an engraved scale known as a stage micrometer
By using the eyepiece graticule and the stage micrometer together, the size of each graticule unit can be calculated
After this is known the graticule can be used as a ruler to measure objects in the field of view
The stage micrometer scale is used to find out how many micrometers each eyepiece graticule unit represents
Worked Example
Calculate the size of the units of the eyepiece graticule in the image below.
Note that the large divisions in the top half of the image show the stage micrometer and that each stage micrometer division is 1 mm across.
Answer:
Step 1: Observe the number of eyepiece unit divisions per micrometer unit
In the image, the stage micrometer has three lines
Each micrometer division has 40 eyepiece graticule divisions within it
Step 2: Calculate the size of each eyepiece graticule unit
40 graticule divisions = 1 mm (1000 µm)
1 graticule unit = 1000 ÷ 40 = 25 µm
An object that spanned five eyepiece graticule units could therefore be measured as follows
5 x 25 µm = 125 µm
Examiner Tips and Tricks
The biggest pitfall with these kinds of calculations is forgetting to convert the units so that they match before embarking on a calculation. E.g. if image size is measured in mm but the actual size of an object is given in µm then both need to be converted into µm before using the equation triangle above.
To convert a measurement from mm into µm the measurement must be multiplied by 1000 (there are 1000 µm in 1 mm).
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