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1.
Since Pearse in 1957 introduced chromoxane cyanine R as a dual nuclear and cytoplasmic stain there have appeared numerous procedures for use of this dye. These have differed widely, sharing in common mainly the implication that each is best. A defendable procedure has been developed on an experimental basis and is reported here. Four stock solutions are needs. (1) a 0.2% solution of chromoxane cyanine R in 0.5% aqueous H2SO4 (v/v); boil this solution for 5 min, (2) 10% FeCl3 in 3% HCI, (3) 1% aqueous NH4OH, and (4) 1% HCI in 70% ethanol. The staining solution: 40 ml of dye solution, 2 ml of FeCl3 solution, 8 ml H2O. Dewax and hydrate sections and stain for 10 min. If a myelin sheath stain is desired differentiate for 1 min in solution (3). For a nuclear stain differentiate for 1 min in solution (4). The nuclear stain when counterstained with eosin closely resembles the routine hematoxylin and win. Histochemical tee show that the functional pup for myelin staining contains nitrogen, and probably hydrogen bonding is involved. The nuclear stain involves a different functional group and possibly neither electrostatic nor hydrogen bonding.  相似文献   

2.
Tissues were fixed at 20° C for 1 hr in 1% OsO4, buffered at pH 7.4 with veronal-acetate (Palade's fixative), soaked 5 min in the same buffer without OsO4, then dehydrated in buffer-acetone mixtures of 30, 50, 75 and 90% acetone content, and finally in anhydrous acetone. Infiltration was accomplished through Vestopal-W-acetone mixtures of 1:3, 1:1, 3:1 to undiluted Vestopal. After polymerisation at 60° C for 24 hr, 1-2 μ sections were cut, dried on slides without adhesive, and stained by any of the following methods. (1) Mayer's acid hemalum: Flood the slides with the staining solution and allow to stand at 20°C for 2-3 hr while the water of the solution evaporates; wash in distilled water, 2 min; differentiate in 1% HCl; rinse 1-2 sec in 10% NH,OH. (2) Iron-trioxyhematein (of Hansen): Apply the staining solution as in method 1; wash 3-5 min in 5% acetic acid; restain for 1-12 hr by flooding with a mixture consisting of staining solution, 2 parts, and 1 part of a 1:1 mixture of 2% acetic acid and 2% H2SO4 (observe under microscope for staining intensity); wash 2 min in distilled water and 1 hr in tap water. (3) Iron-hematoxylin (Heidenhain): Mordant 6 hr in 2.5% iron-alum solution; wash 1 min in distilled water; stain in 1% or 0.5% ripened hematoxylin for 3-12 br; differentiate 8 min in 2.5%, and 15 min in 1% iron-alum solution; wash 1 hr in tap water. (4) Aceto-carmine (Schneider): Stain 12-24 hr; wash 0.5-1.0 min in distilled water. (5) Picrofuchsin: Stain 24-48 hr in 1% acid fuchsin dissolved in saturated aqueous picric acid; differentiate for only 1-2 sec in 96% ethanol. (6) Modified Giemsa: Mix 640 ml of a solution of 9.08 gm KH2PO4 in 1000 ml of distilled water and 360 ml of a solution of 11.88 gm Na2HPO4-2H2O in 1000 ml of distilled water. Soak sections in this buffer, 12 hr. Dissolve 1.0 gm of azur I in 125 ml of boiling distilled water; add 0.5 gm of methylene blue; filter and add hot distilled water until a volume of 250 ml is reached (solution “AM”). Dissolve 1.5 gm of eosin, yellowish, in 250 ml of hot distilled water; filter (solution “E”). Mix 1.5 ml of “AM” in 100 ml of buffer with 3 ml of “E” in 100 ml of buffer. Stain 12-24 hr. Differentiate 3 sec in 25 ml methyl benzoate in 75 ml dioxane; 3 sec in 35 ml methyl benzoate in 65 ml acetone; 3 sec in 30 ml acetone in 70 ml methyl benzoate; and 3 sec in 5 ml acetone in 95 ml methyl benzoate. Dehydrated sections may be covered in a neutral synthetic resin (Caedax was used).  相似文献   

3.
Abstract

The origins of repeated hematoxylin shortages are outlined. Lack of integration in the hematoxylin trade exacerbates the problems inherent in using a natural product. Separate corporations are engaged in tree growth and harvesting, dye extraction, processing of extracts to yield hematoxylin, and formulation and sale of hematoxylin staining solutions to the end users in biomedical laboratories. Hematoxylin has many uses in biological staining and no single dye can replace it for all applications. Probably, the most satisfactory substitutes for aluminum-hematoxylin (hemalum) are the ferric complexes of celestine blue (CI 51050; mordant blue 14) and eriochrome cyanine R (CI 43820; mordant blue 3, also known as chromoxane cyanine R and solochrome cyanine R). The iron-celestine blue complex is a cationic dye that binds to nucleic acids and other polyanions, such as those of cartilage matrix and mast cell granules. Complexes of iron with eriochrome cyanine R are anionic and give selective nuclear staining similar to that obtained with acidic hemalum solutions. Iron complexes of gallein (CI 45445; mordant violet 25), a hydroxyxanthene dye, can replace iron-hematoxylin in formulations for staining nuclei, myelin, and protozoa.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract

Eriochrome cyanine R (ECR) is a synthetic anionic dye that forms complexes with cations such as iron. We found that an iron-ECR (Fe-ECR) mixture provided either nuclear or myelin staining depending on the differentiator used. Selective nuclear staining was obtained by differentiation in an aqueous HCl solution, pH 0.95, followed by a wash in slightly alkaline tap water; the pH difference facilitated control of differentiation. When used with an eosin B counterstain, results were nearly indistinguishable from standard hematoxylin and eosin (H & E) staining. Nuclear staining with Fe-ECR provides tinctorial features similar to regressive aluminum-hemateins as well as resistance to acidic solutions such as those of iron hemateins. Fe-ECR also stained selectively intestinal cells of the diffuse neuroendocrine system (DNES). In addition to its use as an H & E substitute, acid differentiated Fe-ECR produced acid-resistant and selective nuclear counterstaining in combination with Alcian blue, and in the Papanicolaou and van Gieson techniques. With alkali differentiation, Fe-ECR produced selective myelin staining, which was compatible with neutral red counterstaining. Myelin sheaths were stained aqua blue. Fe-ECR could be used for both cytological and histological samples, and was suitable for use in automated tissue stainers. ECR also is less expensive than hematoxylin. Hematoxylin still may be preferred as a nuclear counterstain for some immunostaining methods for which Fe-ECR mixtures probably are too acidic.  相似文献   

5.
Many basic fluorescent dyes stain juxtaglomerular granules to produce characteristic colors in ultraviolet light. The stain is applied to paraffin sections of tissues fixed in 2% calcium acetate-10% formalin or in phosphate-buffered 10% formalin. Procedure: Bring section to water, stain 0.5 min in Delafield hematoxylin, wash in tap water, stain 3 min in a 0.1% aqueous solution of basic fluorescent dye (auramine O, acriflavine, acridine orange, coriphosphine O, acridine yellow, phosphine E, thioflavine T, berberine sulfate, atebrine or rivanol) and differentiate 1 min in 0.1% acetate acid (or omit this step). After washing in tap water, air dry with or without subsequent mounting in a resin. Juxtaglomerular granules stain bright fluorescent yellow or orange against a dark background.  相似文献   

6.
Mordant blue 3 may be used as a suhstitute for hematoxylin in hematoxylin and eosin stains. The staining solution consists of 0.25 g dye, 40 ml of 10% iron dam, 5 ml of cone H2SO4, and 955 ml of dirtilled H2O. Staining the is 5 minutes, followed by differentiation in acid water or acid alcohol. After blueing, the seaions are counterstained with emin. Results closely resemble the hematoxylin and eosin stain.  相似文献   

7.
A compound, which is probably a cationic chelate, can be isolated as a dry powder from a hematoxylin-chrome alum lake. In aqueous acid solution this compound is an excellent nuclear stain which is extremely selective, very resistant to acids and alcohols, and self-limiting. Staining time may vary from 20 min to 16 hr without causing significant differences in staining intensity. To prepare the dry stain, dissolve 10 gm of hematoxylin, 10 gm of NaOH and 70 gm of chrome alum in 600 ml of distilled water, boil 20 min, cool and filter, allowing the filtrate to drop into 3.5 liters of absolute alcohol. Filter off the precipitate formed in the alcohol, and air dry it at room temperature. The staining solution is prepared by dissolving 3 gm of the dried precipitate in 100 ml of 3% HCl.  相似文献   

8.
For differentiation of cells of the adenohypophysis, the Niagara blue 4B method requires no special preliminary fixative nor very fresh tissue, and requires no more time than routine hematoxylin-eosin (H-E) staining. The method requires fixation in 10% formalin. After processing to paraffin wax, deparaffinise and hydrate the sections and stain in 1% aqueous Niagara blue 4B solution for 2 min. Stain afterwards with hematoxylin for 1 min then differentiate, wash, dehydrate, clear and mount. This method can be used also for staining old HE slides by removing the covers, applying the Niagara blue 4B and restaining with eosin. The Niagara blue 4B combined with H-E gives the best and most colorful result. This method allows special staining of the adenohypophysis from human post-mortem material to become routine.  相似文献   

9.
A new cationic dye, experimental cyanine red (du Pont), with an absorption maximum of 536 mμ and a pH of 2.9 in 0.5% aqueous solution, is shown to be suitable for staining nucleic acids and tissue materials presumed to contain acid mucopolysaccharides. Mammalian tissues fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin or Bouin's fluid are dehydrated, embedded in paraffin, sectioned, mounted, deparaffinized, passed through ethanols to water, and stained for 3-30 min in 0.5% experimental cyanine red in water. Differentiation and dehydration in 3 changes (about 1 min each) of n-butanol is followed by clearing in xylene and mounting in resin.  相似文献   

10.
A staining method to increase the contrast of sectioned material for phase contrast microscopy is described. Two stock solutions of the stain are required. The first is made by dissolving 2 gm of luxol fast blue MBS in 100 ml of 95% ethanol. The second solution is made up of 4 ml of a 29% aqueous solution of FeCl3, 95 ml of 95% ethanol, and 1 ml of concentrated HCl. The staining solution is made by mixing equal parts of the two solutions. Sections are deparaffinized and taken to 70% alcohol, stained for 1.5 hr, dehydrated, cleared and covered as usual.  相似文献   

11.
Extensive experimentation with protargol staining of neurons in celloidin and frozen sections of organs has resulted in the following technic: Fix tissue in 10% aqueous formalin. Cut celloidin sections IS to 25 μ, frozen sections 25 to 40 μ. Place sections for 24 hours in 50% alcohol to which 1% by volume of NH4OH has been added. Transfer the sections directly into a 1% aqueous solution of protargol, containing 0.2 to 0.3 g. of electrolytic copper foil which has been coated with a 0.5% solution of celloidin, and allow to stand for 6 to 8 hours at 37° C. Caution: In this and the succeeding step the sections must not be allowed to come in contact with the copper. From aqueous protargol, place the sections for 24 to 48 hours at 37° C. directly into a pyridinated solution of alcoholic protargol (1.0% aqueous solution protargol, 50 ml.; 95% alcohol, 50 ml.; pyridine, 0.5 to 2.0 ml.), containing 0.2 to 0.3 g. of coated copper. Rinse briefly in 50% alcohol and reduce 10 min. in an alkaline hydroquinone reducer (H3BO3, 1.4 g.; Na2SO3, anhydrous, 2.0 g.; hydroquinone, 0.3 g.; distilled water, 85 cc; acetone, 15 ml.). Wash thoroly in water and tone for 10 min. in 0.2% aqueous gold chloride, acidified with acetic acid. Wash in distilled water and reduce for 1 to 3 min. in 2% aqueous oxalic acid. Quickly rinse in distilled water and treat the sections 3 to 5 min. with 5% aqueous Na2S2O3+5H2O. Wash in water and stain overnight in Einarson's gallocyanin. Wash thoroly in water and place in 5% aqueous phosphotungstic acid for 30 min. From phosphotungstic acid transfer directly to a dilution (stock solution, 20 ml.; distilled water, 30 ml.) of the following stock staining solution: anilin blue, 0.01 g.; fast green FCF, 0.5 g.; orange G, 2.0 g.; distilled water, 92.0 ml.; glacial acetic acid, 8 ml.) and stain for 1 hour. Differentiate with 70% and 95% alcohol; pass the sections thru butyl alcohol and cedar oil; mount.  相似文献   

12.
A rather concentrated alcoholic staining solution, an aqueous formalin-containing diluent, and a mixture of ethyl ether and absolute methyl alcohol are required. Formulas: A. Wright's stain (Harleco, Cert. No. LWr-52 was used), 3.3 gm; methyl alcohol, 500 ml. B. Formaldehyde solution 40% USP (Fisher's used), 0.25 ml; distilled water, 500 ml with its pH adjusted to 6.8 by addition of either 0.25% Na2CO2 or 0.25% HCl, as needed. C. A I:I mixture of ethyl ether and absolute methyl alcohol. Procedure: Prepare thin smears of normal or pathological avian blood, air dry, place the slides on a drying rack, cover with solution A, and let stand for about 8 min. Dilute the stain by dropping on a volume of B estimated to be equal to the volume of the partially evaporated stain, and let stand for 2-5 min, or until the surface is well covered by a metallic sheen. Wash with distilled water adjusted to pH 6.8 with the 0.25% Na2CO2 solution or 0.25% HCl. Dry the preparations quickly by blotting with filter paper. Differentiate and adjust the color intensities by dipping 6-10 times into C. Check the results microscopically and differentiate further if the colors are not properly balanced. Dry, uncovered preparations may be examined under oil; or, a cover glass can be applied with balsam or a synthetic resin for permanent mount. Results are similar to those described in textbooks, but have been more consistent than those obtained with other techniques for blood cells of chicken, pheasants, American and Indian partridge, quail, pigeon, turkey, goose, canary, and the Himalayan snow partridge.  相似文献   

13.
A staining method to increase the contrast of sectioned material for phase contrast microscopy is described. Two stock solutions of the stain are required. The first is made by dissolving 2 gm of luxol fast blue MBS in 100 ml of 95% ethanol. The second solution is made up of 4 ml of a 29% aqueous solution of FeCl3, 95 ml of 95% ethanol, and 1 ml of concentrated HCl. The staining solution is made by mixing equal parts of the two solutions. Sections are deparaffinized and taken to 70% alcohol, stained for 1.5 hr, dehydrated, cleared and covered as usual.  相似文献   

14.
The stain is applied routinely to tissues fixed in 10% buffered formalin (pH near 7.0) or in Bouin's fluid. Bring paraffin section to water as usual and mordant 72 hr in 5% CrCl3 dissolved in 5% acetic acid. Wash in water and in 70% alcohol and stain 6 hr. Formula of staining solution: new fuchsin, 1% in 70% alcohol, 100 ml; HCl, conc., 2 ml and paraldehyde, 2 ml, mixed together and added to the dye solution; let stand 24 hr before use. After staining, wash in running tap water 5-10 min, rinse in distilled water and counterstain if desired. Dehydration in alcohol, clearing and covering completes the process. When the paraldehyde is obtained from a freshly opened bottle, standardized staining times can be used and thus eliminate the necessity of differentiating individual slides. The granules of beta cells stained deep blue to purple and were demonstrated in the pancreatic islet of man, dog, mouse, frog, guinea pig and rabbit.  相似文献   

15.
Specific staining of glycogen in rat liver fixed in chilled 80% alcohol, chilled formol alcohol or 10% neutral formalin has been accomplished with acid alizarin blue SWR, alizarin brilliant blue BS, alizarin red S, gallein, haematein, and haematoxylin solutions. TO prepare a staining solution, 1 gm dye, 1 gm K2CO3 and 5 gm KCl were dissolved by heating in 60 ml of water. Concentrated NH4OH (0.880 sp.gr.), 15 ml, followed by 15 ml of dry methanol were added to 20 ml of the cooled solution. Paraffi sections were stained for 5 min, rinsed in dry methanol, cleared in xylene, and mounted in D.P.X. The high specificity obviated the need for counterstaining: nuclei and cytoplasm were unstained. Precipitation of stain onto the slide was rare. As all the dyes carried, like carminic acid, numerous groups capable of forming hydrogen bonds, it is suggested that the staining mechanism involved hydrogen bonding.  相似文献   

16.
Leaf samples of Glycine max and numerous other dicotyledonous species were cleared by a common, well established procedure modified by using more concentrated (10% w/v) aqueous NaOH, and by leaving samples in NaOH for 2-4 weeks and in chloral hydrate for 3 days, all at room temperature. A single dye, chlorazol black E (1 g/100 ml absolute ethanol), is used to stain for 3-6 min. Samples are mounted with the lower epidermis upward. Sieve tubes in favorable material can be seen in minor veins and vein endings.  相似文献   

17.
Following our study on the effect of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) extraction on nuclear staining with soluble metal mordant dye lakes covering 29 dye lakes we chose a series of lakes representing the three groups: (1) readily prevented by DNA removal, (2) weakened by DNA extraction but not prevented, (3) unaffected by DNA removal, for application of other endgroup blockade reactions. The lakes selected were alum and iron hematoxylins, iron alum and ferrous sulfate galleins, Fe2+ gallo blue E, iron alum celestin blue B, iron alum fluorone black and the phenocyanin TC-FeSO4 sequence. Azure A with and without an eosin B neutral stain, was used as a simple cationic (and anionic) dye control. Methylation was less effective than with simple cationic dyes, but did weaken celestin blue, gallo blue E and phenocyanin Fe2+ nuclear stains. These dyes also demonstrate other acid groups: acid mucins, cartilage matrix, mast cells, central nervous corpora amylacea and artificially introduced carboxyl, sulfuric and sulfonic acid groups. Alum hematoxylin stained cartilage weakly and demonstrated sulfation and sulfonation sites. The iron galleins, iron fluorone black and acid iron hematoxylin do not. A pH 4 iron alum hematoxylin gave no staining of these sites; an alum hematoxylin acidified with 1% 12 N HCl gave weaker results. Deamination prevented eosin and orange G counterstains but did not impair nuclear stains with any of the mordant dye lakes. The simple acetylations likewise did not alter mordant dye nuclear staining, the Skraup reagent gave its usual sulfation effect on other tissue elements, but did not alter nuclear stains by mordant dyes. The mordant dyes do not bind to periodic acid engendered aldehyde sites and p-toluidine/acetic acid and borohydride aldehyde blockades did not alter mordant dye lake nuclear staining. Nitration by tetranitromethane, which blocks azo coupling of tyrosine residues, did not alter nuclear staining by the mordant dye lakes. Benzil at pH 13, which prevents the beta-naphthoquinone-4-Na sulfonate (NQS) arginine reaction and the Fullmer reaction of basic nucleoprotein, did not affect iron gallein, iron or alum hematoxylin stains of nuclei or lingual keratohyalin.  相似文献   

18.
Sections 1 μ thick of epoxy-embedded, OsO4-fixed tissues were stained with 4% aqueous basic fuchsin at 70 C for 1 min, rinsed well and destained, also at 70 C, for 1 min. A 2% aqueous methylene blue solution, alkalinized to pH 12.5 by mixing 1 N NaOH with the dye on the slide in the proportion of about 2:1, was then allowed to act for 2 min at 23-27 C. The stain was rinsed off the slide, and the preparation air dried before applying a mounting medium and cover glass. The mounting medium consisted of immersion oil sealed with epoxy household cement. Stains had not faded after 1 yr. The method is simple, rapid (total time 4-5 min), and provides sharp contrast between cellular and connective tissue components.  相似文献   

19.
To a 1.0% filtered aqueous solution of toluidin blue add drop by drop 4-5 ml of either a saturated aqueous solution of HgCl2 or of KI. Collect the resulting dark precipitate on a filter paper and wash it with numerous small quantities of distilled water applied to both inside and outside of the filter paper. Wash until the drippings are distinctly blue (equivalent to about a 0.05% dye solution). Remove the paper and its contents from the funnel and dry either at room temperature or at 37°C. When dry, the treated dye can be brushed off the paper and stored. To prepare a staining solution add a weighed amount (0.12 gm if derived from the HgCl2 treatment, or 0.3 gm if from KI) to 100 ml of distilled water. This insures a saturated solution in either case and gives a satisfactory stain with most sections in 10-30 min. Thionin and other members of the thiazine dyes also showed improvement in staining qualities after this treatment.  相似文献   

20.
To study nuclear events in fructifications of the Basidiomycetes, material was fixed 24 hr in a saturated aqueous solution of HgCl2 containing 1% glacial acetic acid, and embedded in Aquax (G. T. Gurr Ltd.). Following a 4 hr hydrolysis at 20 C in 60% H3PO4, sections were stained for 30 min in a mixture of 4 ml Giemsa R66 (G T. Gurr Ltd.) and 100 ml phosphate buffer at pH 6.5. Differentiation was carried out in sodium cacodylate-HCl buffer at pH 5.8 when required. Preparations were dehydrated in an acetone-xylene series prior to mounting in Euparal. The use of paraffin wax as the embedding medium and HCl as the hydrolysing agent yielded preparations of an inferior quality.  相似文献   

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