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1.
A new method is given to stain bacterial cell walls, especially of Escherichia coli and Bacillus cereus. The cells are smeared in water on a slide and, as soon as air-dry, are stained 3-4 minutes with a 1 % aqueous solution of new fuchsin. The smear is washed with water until the stain ceases to run and is then allowed to air dry. The slide is placed on a 50°C. warm plate for 10-20 seconds, and the smear is then covered with a thin film of a 1-2% solution of Congo red at a pH of about 9.5. The smear is ready for observation as soon as dry or it may be washed with water if desired before observation.  相似文献   

2.
Nongerminating spores, germinating spores, and vegetative cells of Clostridium botulinum type A were observed during phagocytosis in the peritoneal fluid of white mice. Since phagocytes are easily ruptured by heat, the method described avoids heating, as this has been employed in conventional spore staining methods. A thin smear of the fluid is air dried on the slide for 2 hr, and stained by Wright's method: stain, 2 min; dilution water, 2 min; and rinsed; then in 0.005% methylene blue for 30 sec, and rinsed. This is followed by Ziehl-Neelsen's stain for 3-4 min and destained with 1: acetone-95% ethanol for 10 sec. The slide is rinsed, and Wright's staining repeated: stain 1 min, dilution 2-3 min; and thereafter washed about 5 ml of Wright's buffer. Blotting and air drying completes the staining. Non-germinating spores stain light red with a red spore wall, germinating spores are deep red throughout, vegetative cells are blue, and leucocytes show a dark purple nucleus and light blue cytoplasm.  相似文献   

3.
Anthers collected between 9 and 10 AM were treated for 1 hr at 26-28 C with a 0.5% solution of colchicine, washed for 2-4 min in water, placed in 0.002 M 8-hydroxyquinoline for 1 hr, washed in water for 10 min and fixed in: methanol, 60 ml; chloroform, 30 ml; distilled water, 20 ml; picric acid, 1 gm and mercuric chloride 1 gm, for 24 hr. After washing they were hydrolysed in 1 N HCl for 15 min at 60 C, stained in leuco basic fuchsin for 30 min, then smeared on a slide in a drop of acetocarmine. The slides were sealed, stored overnight, the paraffin was removed, and the slide passed through a 1:1 mixture of n-butyl alcohol and acetic acid, then through pure n-butyl alcohol and mounted in Canada balsam. The significant features of this procedure are: (1) use of chromosomes in the haploid condition for karyotype analysis, (2) better exaggeration of constrictions for easier interpretation of chromosome types and (3) good spreading in plants with a large chromosome number.  相似文献   

4.
The methods described are modifications of various technics for the study of spiral structure in chromosomes. They enable permanent preparations to be made with better fixation and allow the use of stains which give clear and more critical definition. The first method described involves the use of ammonium, hydroxide (880 vols.) fumes for the treatment of pollen mother cells before fixation. Anthers of Tradescantia are smeared on a slide and wet in a 3% cane sugar solution. The preparation is then immediately placed in a dish of fixative where it remains for two hours. The slide can then be washed, bleached and stained with gentian violet or hematoxylin. It was found that fumes of nitric acid, hydrochloric acid and glacial acetic acid gave similar results. For the second method, boiling water is used for pre-treatment. A smear is made on a slide and immersed in boiling water for five to ten seconds. The smear is then fixed and treated in the usual manner.  相似文献   

5.
The dye base of new fuchsin was precipitated by adding potassium hydroxide to the dye solution. The precipitate was filtered out and washed with water. It was then suspended in water, brought into solution and adjusted to a pH of about 5.0 with nitric acid. The staining solution was prepared by adding 0.3 ml. of a 14% aqueous solution of pyrogallol and 0.1 ml. of a 1% aqueous solution of boric acid to 3.0 ml. of the dye solution. Smears of cells were made in water on a slide and allowed to dry before covering with the staining solution which was also permitted to air dry. The smear was then washed in water and mordanted for 5-20 seconds in a 0.1% aqueous solution of mercuric nitrate. After rinsing in water, the smear was air dried. When dry, the slide was placed on a 50° C. warm plate for a few seconds before covering with a very thin film of a 5% aqueous solution of nigrosin which had a pH of about 5.0.  相似文献   

6.
A 0.5-1 ml sample of bone marrow is aspirated into a syringe containing 3 drops of 15% K2-EDTA and an additional 1-2 drops of the EDTA solution previously placed on a slide, is then drawn into the syringe. All of the contents are ejected onto this slide, which is carefully tilted 2 or 3 times to an angle of 5-10°, and the edge brought to the center of another slide. The slide with the aspirate is then slowly tilted to 80-90°. Most of the blood and part of the marrow will drain off, leaving spicules of marrow and some blood on the original slide. A small drop of this concentrated marrow is dragged off with the edge of a third slide and deposited about 2 cm from the edge of a fourth slide on which the smear is to be made. The smear is made by bringing a clean (smearing) slide to the slide with the deposited marrow with flat surfaces parallel and the edges at a 90° angle. With gentle pressure, the smearing slide is pushed toward the empty end of the slide upon which the smear is made. This separates the marrow from the circulating blood. Before staining the smear is air dried and heated in an oven at 120-125 C for 2 min; or alternately for satisfactory but less uniform results the smear is heated over a microburner for 10 sec; then the smear is covered with 1 part of undiluted Wright's stain for 30—45 sec which is then diluted with 2 parts of a solution of 0.1-0.2 gm of Na2S2O3 in 1 liter of distilled water and stained for 10-13 min with this diluted stain. Smears made in this manner have 3 concentric zones; the central zone contains the myeloid tissue; the middle, erythropoetic tissue; the outer, a mixture of blood and marrow.  相似文献   

7.
This technique has been developed especially to stain sensory receptors which have been localised intramuscularly by electrophysiological means. Rat intertransverse caudal muscles, removed immediately after death, are fixed for 24 hr in a freshly prepared mixture of absolute ethyl alcohol, 4.5 ml; distilled water, 5 ml; and concentrated HNOa, 0.1 ml. After a further 24 hr in 10 ml of absolute ethyl alcohol containing 0.1 ml of ammonia solution (sp. gr. 0.88), the muscles are washed in distilled water for 30 min and placed in full strength pyridine for 2 days. They are then washed for 24 hr in distilled water (changed 5-8 times) and left in 2% AgNO3, in the dark for 3 days at 25 C. Following reduction in 10 ml of 5% formic acid containing 0.4 gm of pyrogallol for 6-24 hr, the specimens are washed briefly in distilled water and stored in pure glycerol. The nerve endings can then be teased out and mounted in glycerol, under cover glasses ringed with a waterproof cement. The advantage of this method is that it gives consistently good staining of receptors and motor end-plates in small muscles of the rat  相似文献   

8.
Anthers containing actively dividing pollen grains were treated 1 hour at 18-20° C. with 0.2% solution of colchicine, washed 1 hour in water, soaked in 0.002 M aqueous solution of 8-oxyquinoline at 10-14° C. for 1 hour, washed in water for 1 hour and then fixed in Carnoy's solution (alcohol, chloroform, acetic acid, 6:3:1) for 6 hours to overnight. They were washed successively in acetic-alcohol (1:1) 10-15 minutes, 70% alcohol 10-15 minutes and in water 30 minutes before hydrolysing them in bulk in 1 N HCl at 60° C. for 10-15 minutes. “Finally, they were stained in leuco-basic fuchsin for 15-30 minutes. Pollen grains were squeezed out of a stained anther in a small drop of egg albumen on a slide and the albumen smeared uniformly on the slide. The slide was dipped successively for a few seconds in glacial acetic acid and 45% acetic acid respectively. The smear was covered by a cover glass in a drop of aceto-carmine and pressed gently between folded filter papers. The cover glass was sealed with paraffin and stored overnight. To make the preparation permanent the paraffin was removed and the cover glass separated in a 1:1 mixture of acetic acid and n-butyl alcohol. The slide and the cover glass were then passed through n-butyl alcohol, 2 changes, and finally remounted in balsam.  相似文献   

9.
The cells were smeared in water or water which had stood over about 10 mg. of magnesium powder per ml. for 30 minutes or longer. After the smear was dry and whitish in appearance it was held over a beaker of hot water (60-65° C.) until it was translucent or becoming translucent and exposed immediately to hydrogen chloride (gas) for a few seconds. After drying, it was covered with a 0.1% aqueous solution of neutral red for 5-8 minutes. The excess stain was washed from the slide with water and, while wet, placed in a saturated aqueous solution of mercuric nitrate for 5-15 seconds. The smear was rinsed in water and allowed to dry. When dry the slide was placed on a 50° C. warm plate and covered with a thin film of a 5% aqueous solution of nigrosin adjusted to a pH of about 3. The film dried quickly and upon cooling was ready for study. The stained material in the cells varied in shape and location with the moisture content of the smear and the time of exposure to hydrogen chloride. In the area of the smear directly exposed to the gas, the cells in general possessed a round or oval stained structure. Where there was little, if any, exposure to the gas the cells were uniformly stained. There were various gradations in the location and shape of the stained material in the cells from the one extreme to the other.  相似文献   

10.
The tissue is fixed in 10% neutral saline formalin for 1 day to 3 wk depending on the size of the block, dehydrated and embedded in paraffin. The sections are stained at 57° C for 2 hr, then at 22° C for 30 min, in a 0.0125% solution of Luxol fast blue in 95% alcohol acidified by 0.1% acetic acid. They are differentiated in a solution consisting of: Li2CO3, 5.0 gm; LiOH-H2O, 0.01 gm; and distilled water, 1 liter at 0-1° C, followed by 70% alcohol, and then treated with 0.2% NaHSO3. They are soaked 1 min in an acetic acid-sodium acetate buffer 0.1 N, pH 5.6, then stained with 0.03% buffered aqueous neutral red. Sections are washed in distilled water, 1 sec, then treated with the following solution: CuSO4·5H2O, 0.5 gm; CrK(SO4)2·12H2O, 0.5 gm; 10% acetic acid, 3 ml; and distilled water, 250 ml. Dehydration, clearing and covering complete the process. Myelin sheaths are stained bright blue; meninges and the adventitia of blood vessels are blue; red blood cells are green. Nissl material is stained brilliant red; axon hillocks, axis cylinders, ependyma, nuclei and some cytoplasm of neuroglia, media and endothelium of blood vessels are pink.  相似文献   

11.
Fresh, ground, mineralized bone sections 75-100 μ thick are stained 90 minutes or 48 hours in the Bone Stain, a preparation containing fast green FCF, orange G, basic fuchsin, and azure II. Surface stain is then removed by grinding under running water. Sections are washed in 0.1% zephiran chloride (benzalkonium chloride) or in 0.01% mild soap and again washed in tap water, followed with distilled water. Sections are next differentiated in 0.01% acetic acid in 95% methanol, dehydrated in 95% ethanol and 100% ethanol, cleared in alcohol:xylene 1:1, 1:4, 1:9 and 2 changes of xylol, and then mounted permanently in Eukitt's mounting media.

Osteoid seams stain either green to jade green or red to dark red, incompletely mineralized bone red or orange yellow, and the zone of demarcation light green. The walls of lacunae, canaliculae, feathered bone, procedural artifacts and periosteocyte lacunar low-density versions stain red.

The method helps in the differential diagnosis of certain metabolic bone diseases in human biopsy and autopsy material.  相似文献   

12.
The method differs from mammalian techniques for somatic chromosomes in that it uses very small amounts of material. Drosophila melanogaster and an ant, Dorymyrmex sp., are used as examples. Pretreatment with 0.05% Colcemid in insect Ringer solution is applied to mature Drosophila larvae for 5 hr, by feeding, but Dorymyrmex prepupae require puncture and a 15 hr exposure of the puncture to the solution. Organs are removed under 1% sodium citrate, tansferred to fresh citrate for 10-20 min, than fixed in acetic-methanol, 1:3, for 30 min. Transfer to a drop of 60% acetic acid on a clean warmed slide dissociates the cells, which are spread by adding a small drop of fixative and tilting the slide in all directions. After immersion in acetic ethanol, 1:3, for 4 hr, rinsing in the stain solvent and draining the slides then have 2-3 drops of aceto-lactic orcein placed on each, coverslips added, and warmed (at about 50 C) for about 12 hr or until staining is sufficient. They can then either be treated as semipermanent or made permanent by allowing the coverslips to slide off in acetic-ethanol, dehydrating, and mounting in Euparal, or a synthetic resin.  相似文献   

13.
A modified method of staining acid-fast organisms is described. After staining with carbol-fuchsin as usual in the Ziehl-Neelson method, wash with water and while the slide is still wet cover with a saturated acetone solution of malachite green for three to five minutes. Wash and examine. The acid-fast organisms and spores are red in a green background. If the smear is thick and appears too dense, dry for three minutes and hold over the mouth of a bottle of ammonia until decolorized to suit. Upon exposure to the air the green returns. This can be prevented by keeping the smear alkaline, by the addition of sodium bicarbonate.

A second method is described for use with sputum in which acid-fast organisms are scarce. It permits the examination of thick smears and therefore increases the chances of finding tubercle organisms when few in number. Stain with carbol fuchsin as in the Ziehl-Neelson method. Decolorize with 30% phenol-disulfonic acid in water for a few seconds or until decolorized. Wash and examine at once. If color returns upon washing decolorize again. The tubercle organisms appear red in a colorless background.  相似文献   

14.
Chemically clean microscope slides are coated as usual by vaporized carbon. The carbon film is floated off the slide by slowly lowering it at an angle of 45° into 1% HF in distilled water containing 0.025% Tween 80. This solution fills completely (forming a positive meniscus at the edges) one chamber of a double-compartment Perspex trough; the other compartment being similarly filled with the Tween solution only. A Teflon bar, laid on top of the partition keeps the solutions from mixing. After the carbon film loosens, it is floated across the central partition into the second compartment with the aid of a second Teflon bar, using both bars to guide the film on the surface of the fluid. The HF is thus washed from the film. Grids are thinly coated with 0.5% poly isobutylene in toluene (as an adhesive) and previously placed on a rectangle of filter paper supported by wire screening about 1/2 inch from the bottom of the trough. While the Tween solution is drained away through a bottom opening, the carbon film is guided to cover the grids. The filter paper bearing the grids is then removed and caused to dry slowly (about 12-16 hr) to avoid cracking or distortion of the film.  相似文献   

15.
Procedure:Cut paraffin sections and float on a 45-50 C water bath; spread silicone-rubber adhesive (Clear Seal-General Electric) thinly and evenly over 2/3 of the slide; pick up the sections from the floatation water with the coated slide; dry for 1.5 hr at 25 C and at 60 C for 0.5 hr; deparaffinize, and hydrate to water. Place 150 mg of rhodamine B and 150 mg of methylene blue each in separate 100 ml beakers and add 80 ml of 10% HCl to each beaker. Bring both solutions to a boil on a hot plate in a fume hood; immerse tissue sections in the boiling rhodamine B exactly 2 min; rinse in a beaker of 10% HCl 5 sec; immerse in the boiling methylene blue exactly 0.5 min; rinse in distilled water; blot dry; and mount in a silicone-rubber medium (Glass and Ceramic Adhesive—Dow Corning Corp.). Hair shaft keratin stains red; inner root sheath keratin and keratogenous zone of the hair shaft, blue green; epidermal keratin remains unstained. Pilomatrixornas show foci of both red and blue green keratin; epidermal and hair sheath (“sebaceous”) cysts remain unstained.  相似文献   

16.
A versatile stain has been developed for demonstrating pollen, fungal hyphae and spores, bacteria and yeasts. The mixture is made by compounding in the following order: ethanol, 20 ml; 1% malachite green in 95% ethanol, 2 ml; distilled water, 50 ml; glycerol, 40 ml; acid fuchsin 1% in distilled water, 10 ml; phenol, 5 g and lactic acid, 1-6 ml. A solution has also been formulated to destain overstained pollen mounts. Ideally, aborted pollen grains are stained green and nonaborted ones crimson red. Fungal hyphae and spores take a bluish purple color and host tissues green. Fungi, bacteria and yeasts are stained purple to red. The concentration of lactic acid in the stain mixture plays an important role in the differential staining of pollen. For staining fungi, bacteria and yeasts, the stain has to be acidic, but its concentration is not critical except for bacteria. In the case of pollen, staining can be done in a drop of stain on a slide or in a few drops of stain in a vial. Pollen stained in the vial can be used immediately or stored for later use. Staining is hastened by lightly flaming the slides or by storing at 55±2 C for 24 hr. Bacteria and yeasts are fixed on the slide in the usual manner and then stained. The stock solution is durable, the staining mixture is very stable and the color of the mounted specimens does not fade on prolonged storage. Slides are semipermanent and it is not necessary to ring the coverslip provided 1-2 drops of stain are added if air bubbles appear below the coverslip. The use of differentially stained pollen mounts in image analyzers for automatic counting and recording of aborted and nonaborted pollen is also discussed.  相似文献   

17.
This bromine-iodine-gold chloride-reduction sequence stains reticulin in formalin-fixed paraffin sections without risk of sections becoming detached. After hydration, sections are exposed to 0.2% bromine water containing 0.01% KBr for 1 hr, then rinsed and placed for 5 min in a solution consisting of KI, 2 gm; iodine crystals, 1 gm; and distilled water, 100 ml. After this the sections are well washed in distilled water, immersed for 5 min in 1% w/v aqueous solution of chloro-auric acid, again rinsed in distilled water, and the gold is reduced by placing in freshly made 3% H2O2 for 2-4 hr at 37 C, or in 2% oxalic acid for 1-3 hr at the same temperature.  相似文献   

18.
This sequence for staining cutaneous nerves and nerve endings uses 1% formic acid as a fixative for 1 hr, followed by two treatments of 5 min each in 6% H2SO4. The tissue is then submerged in fresh 5% phenylhydrazine hydrochloride for 30 min, washed in running tap water for 10 min, and given a 5 min soak in distilled water. The specimen is placed in Lillie's “cold Schiff” reagent for 4 hr; transferred to 6% H2SO4, 4 changes of 5 min each; washed in distilled water, 3 changes of 5 min each; dehydrated in acetone, 4 changes of 10 min each; and cleared in 2 changes of methyl benzoate, the 1st for 1 hr and the 2nd until the tissue clears. Nerve fibers stain pinkish-purple; muscles also take up the stain, yet the nerves are discernible from the muscles. All other tissue remain unstained.  相似文献   

19.
This technique can produce serial sections as thin as 5 μ from hard chitin-covered materials of insects or other arthropods. Procedures: Fix with alcoholic Bouin's fluid for 3 hr. Henceforth subject material to partial vacuum in each step to ensure a final proper embedding. Wash with 80% ethanol 2 or 3 times for 2 hr or until the picric acid is largely removed. Dehydrate to 90% ethanol and give 2 changes of n-butanol 2 hr each, and one of a 1:1 n-butanol-paraffin mixture in 56-57° oven for 12 hr. Finally, use 2 baths of pure paraffin, 3 hr each, to complete the infiltration. After the last bath, withdraw the specimen from the paraffin, and remove the superficial paraffin, first mechanically and then with a xylene bath for 4 min. Rinse first with n-butanol, and afterwards with absolute ethanol, 2 min each. The compound eyes are protected with a paraffin covering, the specimen is hydrated with a 1% aqueous solution of detergent for 1 hr and then washed with running tap water. The material is treated with a concentrated sulfuric-nitric mixture (H2SO4:HNO3) for 4 hr to eliminate the exoskeleton. After this treatment, the specimen is washed with running tap water for 12 hr, dehydrated with acetone and then bathed in a 2% solution of celloidin in ethyl acetate to form a protective artificial cuticle. This coating is hardened with 2 quick baths of chloroform, the specimen reembedded in paraffin, and the block cast for sectioning.  相似文献   

20.
A method was developed for measuring the nuclear DNA content in single cells previously identified on a bone marrow smear stained by the Wright-Giemsa method. The smear was first photographed and the location of individual cells, identified by morphology, was recorded on a cell map. The smear was then bleached with 50% acid ethanol and absolute methanol, and re-stained by the Feulgen method in 0.05% pararosaniline Schiff's reagent (pH 2.3) at 7 degrees C for 10 min. Nuclear red fluorescence was observed and the intensity of this fluorescence was proportional to the amount of DNA after prior irradiation of smears with green light for 9 hr. The method is useful for measuring cell DNA content in heterogeneous cell populations when morphological cell identification is required.  相似文献   

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