Solvent Dehydration and Low Temperature Vacuum Drying for SEM Imaging of Pre-Hatching Frog Embryos

Daniela Zurita-Paredes, Daniela Flores-Bolaños, Karla Vizuete, Alexis Debut, Andrés Romero-Carvajal*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) is a fundamental technique to study the morphology of anuran embryos and tadpoles. Here, we present a drying method for SEM imaging of late frog embryos using commonly available dehydration solvents such as ethanol or methanol, xylene, and applying low temperature vacuum freeze drying. Briefly, embryos from early embryonic gills development to hatching were fixed with a paraformaldehyde—glutaraldehyde mix, then dehydrated to ethanol or methanol, and then slowly dried using low temperature and constant vacuum pressure. An extra step of clearing using xylene after ethanol dehydration improved results considerably. Our protocol successfully preserved embryo shape and the morphology of fragile and delicate superficial structures (e.g., external embryonic gills, apical ectodermal microridges and surface ciliation), while avoiding the use of some SEM toxic reagents.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70030
JournalJournal of Morphology
Volume286
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Wiley Periodicals LLC.

Funding

Funding for laboratory research and data acquisition was provided by PUCE QINV0082 project from Direcci\u00F3n de Investigaci\u00F3n. ARC thanks Andres Merino\u2010Viteri and Freddy Almeida for their fundamental work in maintaining living colonies of the frogs used for this research. ARC also thanks Ivanna Castillo for the critical review of this manuscript.

FundersFunder number
Pontifical Catholic University of EcuadorQINV0082

    Keywords

    • Epipedobates
    • critical point drying
    • poison frog
    • scanning electron microscopy
    • vacuum drying

    Cite this