Differential silver staining of chromatin in metaphase chromosomes |
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Authors: | H Z Zheng G D Burkholder |
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Affiliation: | Department of Anatomy, College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N OWO, Canada |
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Abstract: | The silver techniques used to demonstrate nucleolar organizer regions and cores in chromosomes can also differentially stain chromatin within chromosomes. Direct silver staining of mouse and human chromosomes resulted in preferential staining of centromeric regions and non-nucleolar secondary constrictions, both of which are composed of constitutive heterochromatin. After C-banding, these regions were no longer silver-stainable, suggesting that the biochemical constituents (presumably non-histone proteins) which contain the reaction sites for silver are extracted during the banding treatment. Light and electron microscopy of chromosomes G-banded with trypsin and then silver-stained revealed heavier deposits of silver over the condensed aggregates of chromatin within the band regions than over the more dispersed interband chromatin. At the ultrastructural level, chromatin fibres were covered with silver grains, indicating that there are many reaction sites for this metal along the fibres. These results suggest that the degree of silver staining in any region of the chromosome may be contingent upon the concentration of chromatin in that region. This finding may have important implications concerning the nature of the silver-stained core-like structure in chromosomes. If a preferential dispersion of chromatin fibres occurs at the periphery of the chromosome during slide preparation, leaving the central region of each chromatid relatively undispersed, this difference in the concentration of chromatin may account for the differential silver staining of these regions and the consequent appearance of a core-like structure. |
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