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1.
R Dierichs 《Histochemistry》1979,64(2):171-187
Commercial ruthenium red has been tested for its purity by spectrophotometry. Impurities detected by this method could be abolished by nitric acid-precipitation of ruthenium brown. This substance has no effect on cell surface staining and converts almost completely to ruthenium red under the conditions used in electron microscopy. It was found, by photometric analysis, that in the ruthenium red-osmium tetroxide-cacodylate combination, generally used for cell surface staining, chemical reactions between ruthenium red and osmium tetroxide occur. As aerial oxidation of hexammineruthenium2+ leads to a product with some surface staining capability, it is suggested that an oxidized product of ruthenium red is responsible for binding to cellular components, and that a reduced product of osmium tetroxide gives an additional contrast enhancement. In ruthenium red-osmium dioxide combinations ruthenium red seems to bind to cell surfaces without any molecular alteration, and contrast is gained by the model proposed by Blanquet (1976b). The latter method could open a way for investigating the binding of ruthenium red to certain natural compounds involved in calcium transport, as postulated by a number of authors. Both ruthenium-osmium combinations differ in their cell surface staining ability. The ruthenium red-osmium dioxide combination tends to form distinct subunits, whereas the osmium tetroxide variety stains homogeneously. In combination with osmium dioxide, the surface staining is affected by EDTA, and, in contrast to osmium tetroxide, a successive application of ruthenium red and osmium dioxide as possible.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Commercial ruthenium red has been tested for its purity by spectrophotometry. Impurities detected by this method could be abolished by nitric acid-precipitation of ruthenium brown. This substance has no effect on cell surface staining and converts almost completely to ruthenium red under the conditions used in electron microscopy. It was found, by photometric analysis, that in the ruthenium red-osmium tetroxide-cacodylate combination, generally used for cell surface staining, chemical reactions between ruthenium red and osmium tetroxide occur. As aerial oxidation of hexammineruthenium2+ leads to a product with some surface staining capability, it is suggested that an oxidazed product of ruthenium red is responsible for binding to cellular components, and that a reduced product of osmium tetroxide gives an additional contrast enhancement.In ruthenium red-osmium dioxide combinations ruthenium red seems to bind to cell surfaces without any molecular alteration, and contrast is gained by the model proposed by Blanquet (1976b). The latter method could open a way for investigating the binding of ruthenium red to certain natural compounds involved in calcium transport, as postulated by a number of authors.Both ruthenium-osmium combinations differ in their cell surface staining ability. The ruthenium red-osmium dioxide combination tends to form distinct subunits, whereas the osmium tetroxide variety stains homogeneously. In combination with osmium dioxide, the surface staining is affected by EDTA, and, in contrast to osmium tetroxide, a successive application of ruthenium red and osmium dioxide as possible.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The usefulness of imidazole-buffered osmium tetroxide as a stain for lipids in transmission electron microscopy has been investigated. Rat liver and other tissues were fixed by perfusion with glutaraldehyde and post-fixed with osmium-imidazole and the appearance of lipid droplets was compared with that after post-fixation in unbuffered aqueous osmium tetroxide or an osmium solution buffered otherwise. Prominent electron-opaque staining of lipid droplets and of lipoprotein particles was noted after post-fixation with 2% osmium-imidazole, pH 7.5, for 30 min. The lipid droplets appeared well circumscribed with no evidence of diffusion. In contrast, the intensity of staining was much less and there was some diffusion around lipid droplets in material post-fixed in aqueous or cacodylate-buffered osmium tetroxide. Spot tests on filter paper revealed that unsaturated fatty acids, especially linolenic and linoleic acids reacted more intensely with osmium-imidazole than with aqueous osmium tetroxide. These findings demonstrate that osmium-imidazole provides an excellent stain for lipids in transmission electron microscopy and that most probably it stains lipids with unsaturated fatty acids.  相似文献   

4.
1. Pyrimidine nucleosides such as thymidine, uridine or cytidine are oxidized readily at 0° by osmium tetroxide in ammonium chloride buffer. There is virtually no oxidation in bicarbonate buffer of similar pH. Oxidation of 1-methyluracil yields 5,6-dihydro-4,5,6-trihydroxy-1-methyl-2-pyrimidone. 2. Osmium tetroxide and ammonia react reversibly in aqueous solution to form a yellow 1:1 complex, probably OsO3NH. A second molecule of ammonia must be involved in the oxidation of UMP since the rate of this reaction is approximately proportional to the square of the concentration of unprotonated ammonia. 3. 4-Thiouridine reacts with osmium tetroxide much more rapidly than does uridine. The changes of absorption spectra are different in sodium bicarbonate buffer and in ammonium chloride buffer. They occur faster in the latter buffer and, under suitable conditions, cytidine is a major product. 4. Polyuridylic acid is oxidized readily by ammoniacal osmium tetroxide, but its oxidation is inhibited by polyadenylic acid. Pyrimidines of yeast amino acid-transfer RNA are oxidized more slowly than the corresponding mononucleosides, especially the thymine residues. Appreciable oxidation can occur without change of sedimentation coefficient.  相似文献   

5.
Synopsis A densitometric method was utilized in the measurement of the relative thickness of the cellular membranes in the ventral lobe of the rat prostate. Potassium permanganate, glutaraldehyde, osmium tetroxide, and ruthenium tetroxide solutions were used as fixatives. During preparation for electron microscopy, the tissues were given standardized treatments to reduce methodological errors; latex particles were applied to the thin sections to serve as reference particles of a known size. The most remarkable observation of the study was that the densitometric method yielded reproducible results and that the different fixatives gave significantly different values for the relative thickness of cellular membranes. Glutaraldehyde, or glutaraldehyde followed by ruthenium tetroxide post-fixation, gave the highest values for membrane thickness while osmium tetroxide and potassium permanganate gave the lowest values. Glutaraldehyde treatment, prior to osmium tetroxide or potassium permanganate post-fixations, rendered the membranes thicker than after osmium tetroxide and potassium permanganate treatments alone. Ruthenium tetroxide appeared to be very suitable for fixation of cellular membranes.  相似文献   

6.
Osmolarity of osmium tetroxide and glutaraldehyde fixatives   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Synopsis The evidence available to date for the importance of fixative osmolarity is considered together with some observations on the volume changes of crab axons after fixation by osmium tetroxide and glutaraldehyde. The results obtained are compared with those obtained from crab axons and from amphioxus skin cells which had been processed and examined with the electron microscope after initial fixation in fixatives of different composition. It is concluded that the osmolarity of the fixative vehicle is of considerable importance when the fixing agent is glutaraldehyde but is of less importance when the fixing agent is osmium tetroxide or a mixture of the two agents.Preliminary observations upon crab axons fixed with glutaraldehyde in a vehicle approximating to the internal composition of the cells suggest that this approach to the design of fixative vehicles may be useful.  相似文献   

7.
Human leukocytes in suspension or in monolayer cultures have been processed for electron microscopy by fixation in a freshly made cold mixture of glutaraldehyde and osmium tetroxide and by "postfixation" in uranyl acetate. Simultaneous exposure to glutaraldehyde and osmium tetroxide eliminates many of the shortcomings seen when either of these agents is used alone as the initial fixative. Specimens are processed to the stage of dehydration as single cell suspensions or as very small clumps to assure rapid penetration of fixatives and efficient washing. The technique is rapid and reproducible. Electron micrographs presented in this report illustrate the ultrastructural features of human white cells prepared by this method.  相似文献   

8.
Summary This paper deals with the application of the osmium tetroxide fixation followed by p-phenylenediamine treatment to salivary gland cells from Chironomus larvae. After this procedure, cytoplasm, nucleoli and Balbiani rings show a high degree of staining both in light and electron microscopy, while chromatin remains unstained. Ethanol fixation followed by osmium tetroxide/p-phenylenediamine does not modify the above mentioned staining pattern. Under these conditions, extractive procedures for lipids do not affect the osmiophilia of nucleoli and Balbiani rings, while RNase or trichloroacetic acid treatment decreaes the staining degree of these structures. In osmium tetroxide/p-phenylenediamine treated salivary glands, the highest contrast within nuclei is seen to occur in the pars granulosa from normal or segregated nucleoli, as well as in Balbiani ring granules, which appear either as hollow granules or with a bipartite or horseshoe-like structure.  相似文献   

9.
Covalent binding of osmium tetroxide to negatively supercoiled DNA in vitro initially induces its relaxation, accompanied by a formation of a single denaturation "bubble" per molecule. Binding of further osmium results in DNA overwinding and the appearance of positive supercoils as demonstrated by gel electrophoresis and electron microscopy.  相似文献   

10.
This paper deals with the application of the osmium tetroxide fixation followed by p-phenylenediamine treatment to salivary gland cells from Chironomus larvae. After this procedure, cytoplasm, nucleoli and Balbiani rings show a high degree of staining both in light and electron microscopy, while chromatin remains unstained. Ethanol fixation followed by osmium tetroxide/p-phenylenediamine does not modify the above mentioned staining pattern. Under these conditions, extractive procedures for lipids do not affect the osmiophilia of nucleoli and Balbiani rings, while RNase or trichloroacetic acid treatment decreaes the staining degree of these structures. In osmium tetroxide/p-phenylenediamine treated salivary glands, the highest contrast within nuclei is seen to occur in the pars granulosa from normal or segregated nucleoli, as well as in Balbiani ring granules, which appear either as hollow granules or with a bipartite or horseshoe-like structure.  相似文献   

11.
The response of fluid bilayer regions to osmium tetroxide and glutaraldehyde fixation was examined in phospholipid multilayers and in nerve bundles from the walking legs of the lobster Homarus americanus. The samples were spinlabeled either with 5-doxylstearic acid (the 4′4′-dimethyloxazolidine-N-ozyl derivative of 5-ketostearic acid) or the maleimide spin label, 4-maleimido-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl. Osmium tetroxide fixation abolishes the characteristic orientation of the spin-labeled lipid bilayer regions and virtually eliminates motion on the electron spin resonance time scale. Glutaraldehyde treatment reduces the motion of maleimide spin labels covalently attached to proteins. However, in contrast to osmium tetroxide fixation, glutaraldehyde has essentially no effect on the orientation and mobility in the fluid bilayer regions, and hence probably does not restrict directly the potential for translational motion in membrane phospholipid bilayer regions.  相似文献   

12.
Osmium tetroxide (OsO4) is a commonly used stain for unsaturated lipids in electron and optical microscopy of cells and tissues. In this work, the localization of osmium oxide and specific lipids was independently monitored in mouse adipose tissue by using time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry with Bi cluster primary ions. Substance-specific ion images recorded after OsO4 staining showed that unsaturated C18 fatty acids were colocalized with osmium oxide, corroborating the view that osmium tetroxide binds to unsaturated lipids. In contrast, saturated fatty acids (C14, C16 and C18) and also unsaturated C16 fatty acids show largely complementary localizations to osmium oxide. Furthermore, the distributions of saturated and unsaturated diglycerides are consistent with the specific binding of osmium oxide to unsaturated C18 fatty acids. The abundance of ions, characteristic of phospholipids and proteins, is strongly decreased as a result of the osmium staining, suggesting that a large fraction of these compounds are removed from the tissue during this step, while ions related to fatty acids, di- and triglycerides remain strong after osmium staining. Ethanol dehydration after osmium staining results in more homogeneous distributions of osmium oxide and unsaturated lipids. This work provides detailed insight into the specific binding of osmium oxide to different lipids.  相似文献   

13.
In the hope of devising a method for prestaining tissues en bloc for electron microscopic radioautography, pieces of radioiodine-labeled liver were taken through various combinations of ferrocyanide-reduced osmium tetroxide, lead aspartate, and aqueous uranyl acetate at room temperature or at 60 degrees C. Following the tests, the method adopted for routine use was to block-stain tissues for 2 hr in potassium ferrocyanide-reduced osmium tetroxide at 4 degrees C followed by 1 hr in Walton's lead aspartate at room temperature. This simple method, which requires no manipulation before or after emulsion coating and development of the radioautographs, provides adequate contrast without inducing background fog or artifacts.  相似文献   

14.
Vegetative cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were fixed with potassium permanganate followed by uranyl nitrate, embedded in methacrylate, and studied in electron micrographs of thin sections. Details of the structure of the cell wall, cytoplasmic membrane, nucleus, vacuole, and mitochondria are described. Cell membranes, about 70 to 80 A thick, have been resolved into two dense layers, 20 to 25 A thick, separated by a light layer of the same dimensions, which correspond in thickness and appearance to the components of the "unit membrane" as described by Robertson (15). The cell wall is made up of zones of different electron opacity. Underlying the cell wall is the cytoplasmic membrane, a sinuous structure with numerous invaginations. The nucleoplasm, often of uneven electron opacity, is enclosed in a pair of unit membranes in which nuclear pores are apparent. The vacuole, limited by a single unit membrane, is usually irregular in outline and contains some dense material. Rod-shaped mitochondria, 0.4 to 0.6 µ in length and 0.2 to 0.3 µ in diameter, are smaller in size, but similar in structure to some of those described in plant and animal cells. Attempts to use osmium tetroxide as fixative were unsuccessful, a result similar to that obtained by other workers. It is suggested that yeast cells are impermeable to osmium tetroxide, except when grown under specific conditions.  相似文献   

15.
It has been postulated that phenol-containing areas of plant and animal tissues were osmiophilic, but proof of direct interaction between osmium tetroxide and phenolic materials, or the nature of such reactions, has been lacking. We find that, under conditions similar to those of normal tissue fixation, osmium tetroxide reacts rapidly with those phenols containing o-dihydroxy groups (including such species found in plant tissues) to give very stable chelate complexes. We conclude that these complexes are responsible for the observed electron-density in phenol-containing areas of tissue treated with osmium tetroxide, so that such phenols are indeed osmiophilic.  相似文献   

16.
H G Heumann 《Histochemistry》1992,97(4):341-347
Microwave-enhanced fixation of animal tissues for electron microscopy has gained in interest in recent years. Attempts to use microwave irradiation for the preparation of plant tissues are rare. In this study; I report on microwave conditions which allow a high quality preservation of plant cell structure. Tissues used were: internodes of Chara vulgaris, leaves of Hordeum vulgare, root tips of Lepidium sativum. Microwave irradiation was done with a commercial microwave oven (Sharp R-5975). Fixatives used were: 2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 7.2 and 1% osmium tetroxide in veronal/acetate buffer, pH 7.2. Conventional fixations with glutaraldehyde/osmium were compared with microwave fixations. Examinations of thin sections showed that microwave fixation (glutaraldehyde or sequential aldehyde/osmium) is an attractive and rapid alternative method for processing plant tissues for electron microscopy. The optimal conditions found were: microwave oven at power level 50 W, 6.5 ml of fixative solution, irradiation times between 32-34 s, final temperature between 40 degrees C and 47 degrees C.  相似文献   

17.
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy was used to determine the oxidation states of osmium compounds present in erythrocyte ghost preparations and related systems treated with osmium tetroxide. Osmium tetroxide and cholesterol, codeposited at ?100 °C, began to react at ?70 °C, and Os(VI) was formed. Similarly, Os(VI) was detected for the known cholesterol-osmate ester prepared and purified chemically. However, osmium tetroxide applied in phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) gave rise to large proportions of Os(IV) and Os(III) species in addition to Os(VI) compounds. Egg phosphatidylcholine likewise produced a mixture of Os(VI), Os(IV), and Os(III), but dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine failed to give significant amounts of osmium containing products under identical conditions. Glutaraldehyde gave a mixture of compounds with the same osmium oxidation states when allowed to react with aqueous osmium tetroxide. Unfixed and glutaraldehyde-fixed erythrocyte ghosts also produced mixtures of Os(VI), Os(IV) and Os(III) under conditions identical to those of normal tissue processing. Additionally, the mixture of adducts initially formed by treatment with osmium tetroxide was further reduced by dehydration of the tissue with ethanol, resulting in a final mixture which was 50–60% Os(III).The results support a scheme for the reaction of osmium tetroxide with tissues in which the initial reaction site is the double bonds of unsaturated lipids to form Os(VI) derivatives. Subsequent hydrolysis and further reduction yield complexes of Os(IV) and Os(III). A mixture of these three states is present in membrane specimens during microscopic observation. Os(VI) and Os(IV) could be present as osmate esters and osmium dioxide, respectively; Os(III) could be present as an oxo- or amino complex(es). The photoelectron spectrum of intact erythrocyte ghosts can be synthesized from the spectra of phospholipid and cholesterol only, suggesting the predominance of the reaction with lipids in the fixation process.  相似文献   

18.
The porphyrin-dependent inactivation ofStaphyloccocus aureus and the induction of mesosomal structures are described. The antimicrobial activity of different photoactivated porphyrins was compared with the dark cytotoxic effect of hemin. Deuteroporphyrin, protoporphyrin, hematoporphyrin, and hematoporphyrin derivative (Hpd) markedly reduced cell growth upon irradiation with light. Photofrin II, the polymerized fraction of Hpd, and other synthetic porphyrins had no effect on staphylococcal growth. Hemin immediately inhibited cell viability in the dark and induced the development of an irregular cell wall, analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Inside the cytoplasm a multivesicular mesosome was formed near the septum, as detected by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The mesosomal volume and its frequency in the cells was increased in a time-dependent manner. The mesosome appearance was not related to fixation by glutaraldehyde or to post-fixation by osmium tetroxide. Glycosyl moieties stained by ruthenium red revealed the formation of membrane-like structures in the mesosome. It is concluded that oxygen-dependent reactions potentiated by porphyrins may induce disturbances in the synthesis of staphylococcal membrane and cell wall, revealed as mesosomes.  相似文献   

19.
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy was used to determine the oxidation states of osmium compounds present in erythrocyte ghost preparations and related systems treated with osmium tetroxide. Osmium tetroxide and cholesterol, codeposited at -100 degrees C, began to react at -70 degrees C, and Os(VI) was formed. Similarly, Os(VI) was detected for the known cholesterol-osmate ester prepared and purified chemically. However, osmium tetroxide applied in phosphate buffer (pH 7.2) gave rise to large proportions of Os(IV) and Os(III) species in addition to Os(VI) compounds. Egg phosphatidylcholine likewise produced a mixture of Os(VI), Os(IV), and Os(III), but dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine failed to give significant amounts of osmium containing products under identical conditions. Glutaraldehyde gave a mixture of compounds with the same osmium oxidation states when allowed to react with aqueous osmium tetroxide. Unfixed and glutaraldehyde-fixed erythrocyte ghosts also produced mixtures of Ss(VI), Os(IV) and Os(III) under conditions identical to those of normal tissue processing. Additionally, the mixture of adducts initially formed by treatment with osmium tetroxide was further reduced by dehydration of the tissue with ethanol, rpesulting in a final mixture which was 50-60% Os(III). The results support a scheme for the reaction os osmium tetroxide with tissues in which the initial reaction site is the double bonds of unsaturated lipids to form Os(VI) derivatives. Subsequent hydrolysis and further reduction yield complexes of Os(IV) and Os(III). A mixture of these three states is present in membrane specimens during microscopic observation. Os(VI) and Os(IV) could be present as osmate esters and osmium dioxide, respectively; Os(III) could be present as an oxo- or amino complex(es). The photoelectron spectrum of intact erythrocyte ghosts can be synthesized from the spectra of phospholipid and cholesterol only, suggesting the predominance of the reaction with lipids in the fixation process.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The reactions between osmium tetroxide and glutaraldehyde and formaldehyde were investigated. It was found that they react together to form intermediate products which then break down to form osmium black. Glutaraldehyde reacts much more rapidly with osmium tetroxide than formaldehyde. The rates of the reactions are increased by increasing the glutaraldehyde concentration or adding bovine serum albumin to the reaction mixture. The reaction rates increase with temperature. The mixtures of fixatives were also tried on tissues and the results paralleled the model experiments. The crosslinking of bovine serum albumin by osmium tetroxide, formaldehyde and glutaraldehyde singly and in mixtures was quantitatively assessed by viscosimetry, gel filtration and disc electrophoresis coupled with densitometry. The crosslinking of bovine serum albumin by pairs of fixatives was less than that produced by the most effective of the pair. After 5 min reaction osmium tetroxide was the most effective crosslinking agent according to viscosimetric experiments, but after one hour's reaction with bovine serum albumin, glutaraldehyde was revealed as the most effective crosslinking agent by gel filtration and electrophoresis.  相似文献   

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