
Goetz SC, Anderson KV (2010) The primary cilium: a signalling Centre during vertebrate development.

Correlative light and electron microscopy.Here, we describe in detail the protocol for this CLEM method applicable for ciliary proteins and proteins in other cellular organelles.

These ciliary localizations of Rab8 and EHD1 can be resolved using CLEM with conventional fluorescence microscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) imaging. The Rab11- and Rab8-assocaited membrane trafficking regulator Eps15 Homology Domain–containing protein 1 (EHD1) and EHD3 also function in early stages of ciliogenesis however, they localize to the CPM. Some primary cilia have a ciliary pocket membrane (CPM) which is observed as an involution from the plasma membrane to the base of the cilia membrane. The small GTPase Rab8 localizes to the ciliary membrane and is important for ciliogenesis, and Rab11 transports the Rab8 guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) Rabin8 to the mother centriole to activate Rab8-dependent ciliary membrane growth.

The core structure of the cilium includes a microtubule-based axoneme, a basal body derived from the mother centriole, and the ciliary membrane, which is connected to the plasma membrane. Numerous electron microscopy (EM) studies of primary cilia have provided ultrastructural details about these antennal-like organelles that extend from the surface of the cell. Correlative light and electron microscopy (CLEM) enables determination of high-resolution structural information for proteins of interest within their biological context through the combination of electron and fluorescence microscopies.
