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1.
An effective cytochemical technique for the simultaneous demonstration of lipids, polysaccharides and protein bodies in the same section from the tissue embedded in Epon 812 is described. Thick sections of peanut cotyledon are used for a typical sample according to the following procelures. Firstly, PAS reaction: (1) Oxidize sections in 0.5% periodic acid in 0.3% nitric acid for 10 min, (2) Wash in running water for 1–2 min and then pass through distilled water, (3) Stain in Schiff's reagent for 30 min, (4) Wash in sodium metabisulfite 3 times, 2 min for each time, (5) Wash in running water for 5 min and then pass through distilled water. Secondly, Sudan black B staining: (1) Rinse section in 70% ethanol for 1-2 min, (2) Stain in fresh 1% Sudan black B in 70% ethanol for 30–60 min at 40–60℃, (3)Rinse in 70% ethanol for 1 min and then in distilled water. Thirdly, Coomassie brilliant blue R staining: (1) Rinse sections in 7% acetic acid for 1–2 min, (2) Stain in I% Coomassie brilliant blue R in 7% acetic acid for 20 min at 60℃, (3) Differentiate in 0.1% acetic acid for I min, (4) Rinse in lunning water for 5 min and then pass through distilled water, (5) Dry at room temperature or in oven, 40℃. The dry sections mount in glycerin-gelatin. After the above three step staining, the three main compounds of the cell can be stained simultaneously. Starch grains and cellulose cell wall take cherry red colour, lipids appear in black, protein bodies are blue. The sealed slides can be kept permanently.  相似文献   

2.
Staining of myelinated fibers including the delicate myelin sheaths of infantile animals is as follows: perfuse the anesthetized animal with a pH 7.4 posphate-buffered fixative, either 10% formalin, 6% gluteraldehyde or a mixture containing 3% gluteraldehyde and 2% acrolein. Dissect out the brain or spinal cord and continue fixation for at least 24 hr. Cut larger brains to 1 cm in at least one dimension. Wash in running tap water 2-3 hr and soak in 2.5% potassium dichromate in 1% acetic acid (the primary mordant) for 3-5 days in darkness. Wash at least 12 hr in running tap water. Dehydrate and embed in celloidin and store in 80% ethanol. Section at 25-60 μ into 80% ethanol. Wash 1-2 min in distilled water and then immerse in 1-2% ferric alum at 50 C for at least 1 hr (the secondary mordant). Wash in tap water and stain at least 1 hr at 50-60 C in 0.5% unripened hematoxylin in 1% acetic acid. Wash well in tap water and differentiate in a mixture containing 0.5% ferrityanide, 0.5% borax and 0.5% Na2CO3; 2 changes. Wash well in distilled water, then in tap water, and dehydrate, clear and mount. Myelin stains black, cell bodies stain tan, and the background is pale yellow. With minor modifications in timing, the method is applicable to frozen and to paraffin sections; the primary mordant being omitted in the freezing technique.  相似文献   

3.
Procedure: Fix 24 hr by immersion in Heidenhain's Susa (2-4 mm specimens) or by perfusion for spinal cord or brain of cats or larger mammals. Wash in 80% alcohol containing 0.5% I2, dehydrate, and embed in paraffin; or, better, double embed in celloidinparaffin. Attach sections to slides by albumen-glycerol. Remove paraffin, and celloidin if used, treat again with iodized alcohol for 30 min, followed by 0.25% Na2S2O3, and wash well with distilled water. Impregnate in darkness for 5 days at 37 C in aqueous 0.66% OsO4 to which 0.2% fresh egg albumen has been added. Check the impregnation microscopically and return the slide to the original staining solution for another 2-3 days if the granules do not show. Wash well in distilled water, dehydrate and cover as usual. The stain does not fade in water, alcohol or zylene; therefore almost any counterstain can be applied. The method stains selectively black the ciliary basal bodies and the osmiophilic granules in the majority of the different types of synaptic terminals; most red blood cells and a few nuclei also stain black.  相似文献   

4.
A series of experiments with protargol staining of nerve fibers in mammalian adrenal glands has yielded the following procedure: Fix-1-2 days in a mixture of formamide (Eastman Kodak Company) 10 cc, chloral hydrate 5 g., and 50% ethyl alcohol 90 cc. Wash, dehydrate and embed in paraffin. Cut sections about 15 and mount on slides. Remove the paraffin and run down to distilled water. Mordant 1-2 days in a 1% aqueous solution of thallous (or lead) nitrate at 56-60°C. Wash thru several changes of distilled water and impregnate in 1% aqueous protargol (Winthrop Chemical Company) at 37-40°C. for 1 to 2 days. Rinse quickly in distilled water and differentiate 7-15 seconds in a 0.1% aqueous solution of oxalic acid. Rinse thru several changes of distilled water for a total time of 0.5 to 1.0 rain. Reduce 3-5 rain, in Bodian's reducer: hydroquinone 1 g., sodium sulfite 5 g., distilled water 100 cc. Wash in running water 3-5 min. and tone 5-10 min. in a 0.2% gold chloride solution. Wash 0.5 min. or more and reduce in a 2% oxalic acid solution to which has been added strong formalin, 1 cc. per 100. (Caution. This last reduction is critical and over-reduction can spoil an otherwise good stain; 15-30 seconds usually suffices, and the sections should show only the beginning of darkening to a purplish or gray color.) Wash, fix in hypo, wash, dehydrate and cover.  相似文献   

5.
As a macroscopic stain for gross brain sections to be embedded in plastic, tannic acid-iron alum is superior to the generally recommended LeMasurier's variation of the Berlin blue technique because of its greater permanency in plastic. However, as originally adopted for use with brain tissue by Mulligan, the intense black staining of gray matter is too dark for plastic embedded specimens. A modification of this method designed to overcome this difficulty is described. Staining procedure: Wash formalin-fixed brain slices overnight in running water. Wash in distilled water, 2 changes, 30 minutes each. Place slices individually in Mulligan's solution at a temperature of 60-65 C for 4 minutes. Rinse in ice water for 10 seconds. Mordant in 0.4% tannic acid in distilled water for 1 minute. Wash in running tap water for 1 minute. Develop in 0.08% ferric ammonium sulfate in distilled water until gray matter is light gray, about 10-15 seconds. Wash in lukewarm running water for 1 hour, then gently hand-rub whitish film from myelinated surfaces. Store briefly in 3% formalin or 25% glycerine if necessary depending on plastic embedding procedure to be followed.  相似文献   

6.
As a macroscopic stain for gross brain sections to be embedded in plastic, tannic acid-iron alum is superior to the generally recommended LeMasurier's variation of the Berlin blue technique because of its greater permanency in plastic. However, as originally adopted for use with brain tissue by Mulligan, the intense black staining of gray matter is too dark for plastic embedded specimens. A modification of this method designed to overmme this difficulty is described. Staining procedure: Wash formalin-fixed brain slices overnight in running water. Wash in distilled water, 2 changes, 30 minutes each. Place slices individually in Mulligan's solution at a temperature of 60-65 C for 4 minutes. Rinse in ice water for 10 seconds. Mordant in 0.4% tannic acid in distilled water for 1 minute. Wash in running tap water for 1 minute. Develop in 0.08% ferric ammonium sulfate in distilled water until gray matter is light gray, about 10-15 seconds. Wash in lukewarm running water for 1 hour, then gently hand-rub whitish film from myelinated surfaces. Store briefly in 3% formalin or 25% glycerine if necessary depending on plastic embedding procedure to be followed.  相似文献   

7.
After deceration, celloidinization and hydration, oxidize 10 micron paraffin sections for 15 min in a solution containing 0.3 g KMnO4 and 0.1 ml conc. H2SO4 per 100 ml distilled water. Wash in water and reduce in 5% oxalic acid until the sections are colorless. Wash thoroughly in water and place in 4% iron alum solution for two hours. Wash briefly in water and stain for two hours in phosphotungstic acid hematoxylin. Rinse briefly in 95% ethanol and dehydrate in n-butyl alcohol or absolute ethanol for 4 min with two changes, clear and mount. Glial fibers, myofibrils, red blood cells, etc. are stained blue while astrocyte cell bodies, collagen, etc. are stained red. This stain has proven highly consistent in a wide variety of astrocytic derangements. Despite the intensity of this PTAH modification, false positive staining was not observed.  相似文献   

8.
After deceration, celloidinization and hydration, oxidize 10 micron paraffin sections for 15 min in a solution containing 0.3 g KMnO4, and 0.1 ml conc. H2SO2, per 100 ml distilled water. Wash in water and reduce in 5% oxalic acid until the sections are colorless. Wash thoroughly in water and place in 4% iron alum solution for two hours. Wash briefly in water and stain for two hours in phosphotungstic acid hematoxylin. Rinse briefly in 95% ethanol and dehydrate in n-butyl alcohol or absolute ethanol for 4 min with two changes, clear and mount. Glial fibers, myofibrils, red blood cells, etc. are stained blue while astrocyte cell bodies, collagen, etc. are stained red. This stain has proven highly consistent in a wide variety of astrocytic derangements. Despite the intensity of this PTAH modification, false positive staining was not observed.  相似文献   

9.
Controlled silver staining of connective tissue fibers and sometimes of these fibers and cells simultaneously can be obtained. 1. Fix in 10% formalin. Embed in paraffin and cut sections as usual, but do not mount them on slides. Deparaffinize and hydrate through xylene, alcohols and distilled water and henceforth treat them the same as frozen sections. Real frozen sections can also be used. 2. Treat with a freshly prepared 1% solution of KMnO4, usually 15-60 sec, sometimes up to 10 min. 3. Wash in distilled water, 5-10 sec. 4. Decolorize in 2% potassium metabisulfite, 10-20 sec. 5. Place in distilled water, 1 min. 6. Sensitize with 2% iron alum, 1 min. 7. Place in distilled water, 1 min. 8. Impregnate in Gomori's silver oxide solution, 2 min. 9. Wash in a 1.5% aqueous solution of pyridine, about 15 sec. 10. Reduce in a mixture containing 0.25% gelatin and 2% formalin 1 min. 11. Repeat steps 7 to 10 once or several times until the connective tissue fibers are completely stained. For cell staining (which may fail) proceed as follows: After the first insufficient staining of the connective tissue fibers, rinse in distilled water, dip for 1 sec in Gomori's solution and reduce immediately in gelatin-formalin without previous washing in pyridined water. This step can be repeated. 12. If the staining is too strong, decolorize as needed in 2% iron alum. 13. Toning in 0.2% gold chloride, 5 min or more, followed by fixation in 5% sodium thiosulfate, 1 min, is optional. Counterstain as desired. 14. Wash in tap water, dehydrate, clear in xylene and mount in balsam. The same technique applied to sections attached to slides gives good results but inferior to that obtained in paraffin sections processed in the loose, unmounted condition.  相似文献   

10.
Results of a Gram staining procedure varied with modifications of each of the steps involved. The best Gram differentiation was obtained when crystal violet and iodine solutions of high concentrations were used, and when n-propyl alcohol was used as the decolorizer. The decolorization step must be carefully quantitated, and one of the most important variables observed was whether a slide was brought into the decolorizer wet, or dry. Dry slides took 6 to 12 times as long to decolorize as wet. Wash steps, following crystal violet, and following the decolorizer, also greatly influence results by causing Gram-positive organisms to appear to be Gram-negative. The results indicated that Gram-stain procedures should not be varied to suit the whims of individual operators, and that each step could be specifically defined both as to the reagent used, and the procedure to be followed.

The followng Gram procedure is recommended for heat-fixed bacterial smears on glass slides. Flood the slide with Hucker's crystal violet for 1 ruin. Wash for 5 sec by dipping into tap water running into a 250 ml beaker at a rate of 30 ml per sec Rinse off the excess water with Burke's iodine, flood the slide with this solution for 1 min, then wash 5 sec in tap water as above. Decolorize by passing the wet slide through 3 (75 × 25 mm) Coplin dishes containing n-propyl alcohol, decolorize 1 min in each dish for a total of 3 min. Wash 5 sec in tap water as above, rinse off the excess water with 0.25% safranin, then flood the slide with this solution for 1 min. Wash as above, blot dry, and examine. An alternate procedure for decolorization would be to use either 95% n-propyl alcohol or 95% ethyl alcohol, but shorten the decolorization time to 30 sec per dish for a total of 1.5 min. After 10 slides, the decolorizer in the first dish should be replaced by fresh. This dish is then placed last in the sequence, with dish No. 2 moved to the No. 1 position.  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.
Further work on conditions affecting the reduction of paraffin sections impregnated with protargol showed that the optimum pH for sulfite-amidol mixtures was between 6.5 and 7.5. A staining method which requires about two hours to complete consists of the following steps: (1) One hour impregnation at 60° C. in 10% AgNO3. (2) Wash in distilled water 3 changes of 30 sec. each. (3) Put into protargol (Winthrop Chem. Co., New York, N. Y.) 0.2% aq. for another hour at room temperature. (4) Rinse 2 sec. (5) Reduce one to two min. in amidol 0.2 g., Na2SO3 8 g., NaHSO3 I g., and water 100 cc. (6) Wash thoroly. (7) Tone with 0.1% gold chloride. (8) Wash. (9) Reduce with a 0.5% aq. soln. of amidol (no sulfite). (10) Wash, dehydrate and cover. The method stains neurofibrillae and unmyelinated fibers and has worked well on most tissues of vertebrates. The stain follows acid alcoholic fixation.  相似文献   

13.
Cleared and stained whole mounts of stem apices of two Labiates and of Phaseolus plumule giving a three-dimensional picture of the apical structure have been prepared as follows. Fix the buds in formalin-acetic acid-50% alcohol (5:5:90) for 24 hr or longer and then dissect under a binocular microscope to leave only the youngest leaves surrounding the apex. Wash for several minutes in distilled water and then clear the material in a 5% solution of sodium hydroxide at approximately 40° C for 24-48 hr. Wash thoroughly in several changes of distilled water, transfer to a solution of 1% tannic acid and 0.5% sodium salicylate for up to a minute. Wash briefly in distilled water and stain in a 1.5% solution of ferric chloride until blue-black. Wash in distilled water and dehydrate through 50%, 70%, 85%, 95% and 2 changes of absolute ethyl alcohol. If the xylem is not stained well, counter-stain for a few seconds in a 0.5% solution of safranin O in a 1:1 mixture of xylene and absolute alcohol and wash out the excess stain in the same mixture. Clear in 2 changes of xylene and place on a glass slide in thick Canada balsam. Orient with needles under low magnification and cover.  相似文献   

14.
The following procedure stains the atrioventricular conduction system selectively. (1) Wash the fresh heart with physiological saline solution to free it of blood; (2) fix it in 10% formalin containing 0.5% HIO4 for 1 hr; (3) wash in 3 changes of distilled water for 20 min; (4) keep in 80% alcohol for 12 hr to 2 wk; (5) wash with distilled water; (6) treat with a dilute Schiff's reagent containing 0.1 gm of basic fuchsin per 100 ml for 0.5-2 min; (7) rinse in three changes of 2% Na2SO3 in 0.2 N HCI for 3-5 min; (8) wash and examine in 80% alcohol; store in 80% alcohol.  相似文献   

15.
For staining flagella of bacteria use actively motile organisms 20 to 24 hours old, allow to diffuse in sterile water 20 to 30 minutes, transfer droplets of the suspension to clean slides and let evaporate without spreading. Then treat 2 to 4 minutes with the following mordant: tannic acid 10 or 20%, 50 cc.; ferric chloride 5%, 10 to 15 cc.; carbol fuchsin (Ziehl-Nielson), 5 cc.; hydrogen peroxide 3%, 6 to 8 cc. Wash and stain 2 to 3 minutes with a mixture of basic fuchsin, saturated alcoholic, 10 cc.; anilin oil (1 part) and 95% alcohol (3 parts) mixed, 5 cc.; distilled water, 30 cc.; acetic acid, 4%, 1 cc. Wash thoroly with water.  相似文献   

16.
The technic recommended is: Fix 6-12 hr. in 10% formalin containing 1% CaCl2. Cut frozen sections without embedding or after gelatin or carbowax. Stain 90 min. at 60°C. in saturated aqueous Nile blue sulfate, 500 ml. plus 50 ml. of 0.5% H2SO4, boiled 2 hr. before use. Rinse in distilled water, and place in acetone heated to 50°C. Remove the acetone from the source of heat and allow the sections to remain 30 min. Differentiate in 5% acetic acid 30 min., rinse in distilled water, and refine the differentiation in 0.5% HCl for 3 min. Wash in several changes of distilled water and mount in glycerol jelly. Results: phospholipids - blue; everything else - unstained. Counterstaining nuclei with safranin is optional, but if done, it preferably precedes the Nile blue and is then differentiated by the acetic acid. The histochemical principles on which the method is based are as follows: (1) The calcium compounds of phospholipids combine with the oxazine form of Nile blue sulfate and survive subsequent treatment; (2) neutral lipids are dissolved out by acetone; (3) proteins and other interfering substances are destained by the acetic acid and hydrochloric acid baths.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
A dye, which is probably a cationic chelate, has been separated from a gallocyanin-chrome alum staining solution and prepared in the dry form. This dye is apparently the major staining compound. To prepare the chelate or dye, dissolve 150 mg of gallocyanin and 15 gm of chrome alum in 100 ml of distilled water and boil for 10-20 min, cool, filter, wash the precipitate with sufficient distilled water to restore the volume of the filtrate to 100 ml, then add concentrated NH4OH until the pH is raised to 8-8.5. Filter, with suction, through a medium porosity fritted glass funnel. Wash with 100-200 ml of anhydrous ethyl ether and air dry the precipitate. This ratio of chrome alum to gallocyanin and the 10-20 min boiling time are optimal for preparation of the staining solution, which may be used either for staining or for separation of the chelate in its dry form. From the dried chelate, the staining solution is prepared as a 3% solution in1 N H2SO4 and a staining time of 16-24 hr is required. No differentiation is needed; the stain is self-limiting.  相似文献   

19.
A modified tannic acid-phosphomolybdic acid-dye procedure is used for staining myoepithelial cells in formalin fixed surgical and autopsy material. Paraffin sections are brought to water, mordanted for 1 hr in Bouin's fixative previously heated to 56 C, cooled while still in Bouin's, rinsed in tap water until sections are colorless, rinsed in distilled water, treated with 5% aqueous tannic acid 5-20 min, rinsed in distilled water 30 sec or less, treated with 1% aqueous phosphomolybdic acid 10-15 min, rinsed 30 sec in distilled water, rinsed in methanol, stained 1 hr in a saturated solution of amido black or phloxine B in 9:1 methanol:acetic acid, rinsed in 9:1 methanol:acetic acid, dehydrated, cleared and mounted. Myoepithelial cells of sweat, lacrimal, salivary, bronchial, and mammary glands are blue-green with amido black or pink with phloxine B. Fine processes of myoepithelial cells are well delineated. Background staining is minimal and the procedure is highly reproducible.  相似文献   

20.
A modified tannic acid-phosphomolybdic acid-dye procedure is used for staining myoepithelial cells in formalin fixed surgical and autopsy material. Paraffin section are brought to water, mordanted for 1 hr in Bouin's fixative previously heated to 56 C, cooled while still in Bouin's, rinsed in tap water until sections are colorless, rinsed in distilled water, treated with 5% aqueous tannic acid 5-20 min, rinsed in distilled water 30 sec or less, treated with 1% aqueous phosphomolybdic acid 10-15 min, rinsed 30 sec in distilled water, rinsed in methanol, stained 1 hr in a saturated solution of amido black or phloxine B in 9:l methanol:acetic acid, rinsed in 9:l methanol:acetic acid, dehydrated, cleared and mounted. Myoepithelial cells of sweat, lacrimal, salivary, bronchial, and mammary glands are blue-green with amido black or pink with phloxine B. Fine processes of myoepithelial cells are well delineated. Background staining is minimal and the procedure is highly reproducible.  相似文献   

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