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1.
TO determine the amount of K2Cr2O7 required to produce optimal Giemsa type staining, six 1 g amounts (corrected for dye content) of zinc methylene blue were oxidized with graded quantities of K2Cr2O7 to produce 4, 8, 12, 16, 20 and 24% conversion of methylene blue to azure B. These were heated with a blank control 15 minutes at 100 C in 60-65 ml 0.4 N HCI. cooled, and adjusted to 50 ml to give 20 mg original dye/ml. Aliquots were then diluted to 1% and stains were made by the “Wet Giemsa” technic (Lillie and Donaldson 1979) using 6 ml 1% polychrome methylene blue, 4 ml 1% cosin (corrected for dye content), 2 ml 0.1 M pH 6.3 phosphate buffer, 5 ml acetone, and 23 ml distilled water. The main is added last and methanol fixed blood films are stained immediately for 20-40 min.

For methylene blue supplied by MCB 12-H-29, optimal stains were obtained with preparations containing 20 and 24% conversion of methylene blue to azure B. With methylene blue supplied by Aldrich (080787), 16% conversion of methylene blue to azure B was optimal. Eosinates prepared from a low azure B/methylene blue preparation selected in this way give good stains when used as a Wright stain in 0.3% methanol solution. However, when the 600 mg eosinate solution in glycerol methanol is supplemented with 160 mg of the same azure B/methylene blue chloride the mixture fails to perform well. The HCI precipitation of the chloride apparently produces the zinc methylene blue chloride salt which is poorly soluble in alcohol. It appears necessary to have a zinc-free azure B/methylene blue chloride to supplement the probably zinc-free eosinate used in the Giemsa mixture.  相似文献   

2.
A simple and rapid method is described for staining semithin sections of material embedded in epoxy resin for observing tissues prior to transmission electron microscopy. The method is suitable for tissue fixed with a glutaraldehyde-formaldehyde mixture and postfixed in osmium tetroxide. No etching or oxidizing procedures are necessary. Sections 0.5-0.8 µm thick are dried onto a slide and stained with either 0.75% methylene blue and 0.25% azure B or 0.5% methylene blue and 0.5% azure II in 0.5% aqueous borax and heated over a flame for 8-10 sec. The slides are rinsed with water, then stained the same way with 0.1% basic fuchsine in 5% aqueous ethanol. Cytoplasm stains blue; nuclei darker blue; collagen, mucus and elastin pink to red; fat and intracellular lipid droplets gray-green.  相似文献   

3.
Detailed schemes are described for the preparation of purified methylene blue and azure B from commercial samples of methylene blue. Purified methylene blue is obtained by extracting a solution of the commercial product in an aqueous buffer (pH 9.5) with carbon tetrachloride. Methylene blue remains in the aqueous layer but contaminating dyes pass into the carbon tetrachloride. Metal salt contaminants are removed when the dye is crystallized by the addition of hydrochloric acid at a final concentration of 0.25 N. Purified azure B is obtained by extracting a solution of commercial methylene blue in dilute aqueous sodium hydroxide (pH 11-11.5) with carbon tetrachloride. In this pH range, methylene blue is unstable and yields azure B. The latter passes into the carbon tetrachloride layer as it is formed. Metal salt contaminants remain in the aqueous layer. A concentrated solution oa azure B is obtained by extracting the carbon tetrachloride layer with 4.5 X 10(-4)N hydrobromic acid. The dye is then crystallized by increasing the hydrobromic acid concentration to 0.23 N. Thin-layer chromatography of the purified dyes shows that contamination with related thiazine dyes is absent or negligible. Ash analyses reveal that metal salt contamination is also negligible (sulphated ash less than 0.2%).  相似文献   

4.
A simple and rapid method is described for staining semithin sections of material embedded in epoxy resin for observing tissues prior to transmission electron microscopy. The method is suitable for tissue fixed with a glutaraldehyde-formaldehyde mixture and postfixed in osmium tetroxide. No etching or oxidizing procedures are necessary. Sections 0.5-0.8 microm thick are dried onto a slide and stained with either 0.75% methylene blue and 0.25% azure B or 0.5% methylene blue and 0.5% azure II in 0.5% aqueous borax and heated over a flame for 8-10 sec. The slides are rinsed with water, then stained the same way with 0.1% basic fuchsine in 5% aqueous ethanol. Cytoplasm stains blue; nuclei darker blue; collagen, mucus and elastin pink to red; fat and intracellular lipid droplets gray-green.  相似文献   

5.
When uninjured cells of Valonia are placed in methylene blue dissolved in sea water it is found, after 1 to 3 hours, that at pH 5.5 practically no dye penetrates, while at pH 9.5 more enters the vacuole. As the cells become injured more dye enters at pH 5.5, as well as at pH 9.5. No dye in reduced form is found in the sap of uninjured cells exposed from 1 to 3 hours to methylene blue in sea water at both pH values. When uninjured cells are placed in azure B solution, the rate of penetration of dye into the vacuole is found to increase with the rise in the pH value of the external dye solution. The partition coefficient of the dye between chloroform and sea water is higher at pH 9.5 than at pH 5.5 with both methylene blue and azure B. The color of the dye in chloroform absorbed from methylene blue or from azure B in sea water at pH 5.5 is blue, while it is reddish purple when absorbed from methylene blue and azure B at pH 9.5. Dry salt of methylene blue and azure B dissolved in chloroform appears blue. It is shown that chiefly azure B in form of free base is absorbed by chloroform from methylene blue or azure B dissolved in sea water at pH 9.5, but possibly a mixture of methylene blue and azure B in form of salt is absorbed from methylene blue at pH 5.5, and azure B in form of salt is absorbed from azure B in sea water at pH 5.5. Spectrophotometric analysis of the dye shows the following facts. 1. The dye which is absorbed by the cell wall from methylene blue solution is found to be chiefly methylene blue. 2. The dye which has penetrated from methylene blue solution into the vacuole of uninjured cells is found to be azure B or trimethyl thionine, a small amount of which may be present in a solution of methylene blue especially at a high pH value. 3. The dye which has penetrated from methylene blue solution into the vacuole of injured cells is either methylene blue or a mixture of methylene blue and azure B. 4. The dye which is absorbed by chloroform from methylene blue dissolved in sea water is also found to be azure B, when the pH value of the sea water is at 9.5, but it consists of azure B and to a less extent of methylene blue when the pH value is at 5.5. 5. Methylene blue employed for these experiments, when dissolved in sea water, in sap of Valonia, or in artificial sap, gives absorption maxima characteristic of methylene blue. Azure B found in the sap collected from the vacuole cannot be due to the transformation of methylene blue into this dye after methylene blue has penetrated into the vacuole from the external solution because no such transformation detectable by this method is found to take place within 3 hours after dissolving methylene blue in the sap of Valonia. These experiments indicate that the penetration of dye into the vacuole from methylene blue solution represents a diffusion of azure B in the form of free base. This result agrees with the theory that a basic dye penetrates the vacuole of living cells chiefly in the form of free base and only very slightly in the form of salt. But as soon as the cells are injured the methylene blue (in form of salt) enters the vacuole. It is suggested that these experiments do not show that methylene blue does not enter the protoplasm, but they point out the danger of basing any theoretical conclusion as to permeability on oxidation-reduction potential of living cells from experiments made or the penetration of dye from methylene blue solution into the vacuole, without determining the nature of the dye inside and outside the cell.  相似文献   

6.
A simple and rapid method is described for staining semithin sections of material embedded in epoxy resin for observing tissues prior to transmission electron microscopy. The method is suitable for tissue fixed with a glutaraldehyde-formaldehyde mixture and postfixed in osmium tetroxide. No etching or oxidizing procedures are necessary. Sections 0.5–0.8 µm thick are dried onto a slide and stained with either 0.75% methylene blue and 0.25% azure B or 0.5% methylene blue and 0.5% azure II in 0.5% aqueous borax and heated over a flame for 8–10 sec. The slides are rinsed with water, then stained the same way with 0.1% basic fuchsine in 5% aqueous ethanol. Cytoplasm stains blue; nuclei darker blue; collagen, mucus and elastin pink to red; fat and intracellular lipid droplets gray-green.  相似文献   

7.
Zinc chloride methylene blue appeared on the market almost contemporaneously with the zinc-free medicinal form. The former has rarely been reported as being used in blood stains. Recent suspension of manufacture of medicinal methylene blue by it. principal American producer has excited interest in the use of the zinc chloride form for the preparation of blood stains. According to Lillie (1944a,b) the azure B content of zinc chloride methylene blue may have varied from 5 to 30% in the samples studied. Taking the Merck Index (1968, 1976) figures for the spectroscopic absorption maximum (λmax) of 667.8 and 668 nm as standard, recent samples of zinc chloride methylene blue are calculated to contain 6-8% azure B. These figures are baaed on 1) the shift of λmax after exhaustive pH 9.5 chloroform extraction, 2) evaluation of the actual ratio of the observed TiCl2 dye content to the theoretical for pure zinc chloride methylene blue, 3) comparison of spectroscopic and staining effects of graded hot dichromate oxidation products with those of highly purified azure B-methylene blue mixtures of known proportions.

As far as can be found, medicinal methylene blue is almost the exclusive source of cosin polychrome methylene blue blood stains. Lillie (1944c) included a short series comparing 5 zinc chloride methylene blues with a dozen medicinal methylene blue samples; all were oxidized with hot dichromate to produce successful Wright stains. No effort was made to remove the zinc Exhaustive pH 9.5 chloroform extraction of zinc chloride methylene blue (lot MCB 12-H-29) yielded a small amount of red dye which when extracted into 0.1 N HCI gave λmax = 650. The extraction moved the absorption peak of the zinc chloride methylene blue from 667 to 668 nm and the midpoint of the 90% maximum absorption band, 18 nm wide, from 666.5 to 667.5 nm.  相似文献   

8.
It is at present difficult to obtain a good phloxine-metbylene blue stain on formalin-fixed tissue. When phloxine has been used, it is washed out in the process of staining with methylene blue and differentiating with colophony (rosin). In the original technic of Mallory, Zenker's fixation is used. The tissue is first stained with a 2.5% aqueous solution of phloxine, then with a solution of 1% methylene blue plus 1% azure II and differentiated in colophony.1  相似文献   

9.
Starting from ancient reports that rare samples of methylene blue were apparently sufficiently contaminated with azures to give red plasmodial and red purple nuclear chromatin in Chenzinsky type methylene blue eosin stains, it was decided to determine how little azure B would suffice for such staining in methylene blue eosin stains. The traditional 1902 Giemsa had an azure:methylene blue: eosin ratio of about 6:3:6.3:10; Lillie's 1943 formula had a 5:7:10 ratio. In the current series of tests 5:7:10 (I), 4:8:10 (II), 3:9:10 (III), 2:10:10 (IV), 1:11:10 (V), and 0:12:10 (VI) were used. Malaria and blood stains were better than the standard 5:7:10 (I) in III, IV and II in that order. Normal and leukemic human blood, mouse blood with Plasmodium berghei, and monkey blood with the CDC strain of Pl. falciparum were used as test materials. The staining mixtures were made from highly purified samples of azure B and methylene blue. Staining mixtures contained 12 ml 0.1% thiazin dye, 10 ml 0.1% eosin, 2 ml each of glycerol, methanol and 0.1 M phosphate buffer pH 6.5, 3 ml acetone as accelerator, and distilled water to make 40 ml; staining times of 10-30 min were used.  相似文献   

10.
Starting from ancient reports that rare samples of methylene blue were apparently sufficiently contaminated with azures to give red plasmodial and red purple nuclear chromatin in Chenzinsky type methylene blue eosin stains, it was decided to determine how little azure B would suffice for such staining in methylene blue eosin stains. The traditional 1902 Giemsa had an azure : methylene blue : eosin ratio of about 6 : 3 : 6.3 : 10; Lillie's 1943 formula had a 5 : 7 : 10 ratio. In the current series of tests 5 : 7 : 10 (I), 4 : 8 : 10 (II), 3 : 9 : 10 (III), 2 : 10 : 10 (IV), 1 : 11 : 10 (V), and 0 : 12 : 10 (VI) were used. Malaria and blood stains were better than the standard 5 : 7 : 10 (I) in III, IV and II in that order. Normal and leukemic human blood, mouse blood with Plasmodium berghei, and monkey blood with the CDC strain of Pl. falciparum were used as test materials. The staining mixtures were made from highly purified samples of azure B and methylene blue. Staining mixtures contained 12 ml 0.1% thiazin dye, 10 ml 0.1% eosin, 2 ml each of glycerol, methanol and 0.1 M phosphate buffer pH 6.5, 3 ml acetone as accelerator, and distilled water to make 40 ml; staining times of 10--30 min were used.  相似文献   

11.
Glass electrode measurements of the pH value of the sap of cells of Nitella show that azure B in the form of free base penetrates the vacuoles and raises the pH value of the sap to about the same degree as the free base of the dye added to the sap in vitro, but the dye salt dissolved in the sap does not alter the pH value of the sap. It is concluded that the dye penetrates the vacuoles chiefly in the form of free base and not as salt. The dye from methylene blue solution containing azure B free base as impurity penetrates and accumulates in the vacuole. This dye must be azure B in the form of free base, since it raises the pH value of the sap to about the same extent as the free base of azure B dissolved in the sap in vitro. The dye absorbed by the chloroform from methylene blue solution behaves like the dye penetrating the vacuole. These results confirm those of spectrophotometric analysis previously published. Crystal violet exists only in one form between pH 5 and pH 9.2, and does not alter the pH value of the sap at the concentrations used. It does not penetrate readily unless cells are injured. A theory of "multiple partition coefficients" is described which explains the mechanism of the behavior of living cells to these dyes. When the protoplasm is squeezed into the sap, the pH value of the mixture is higher than that of the pure sap. The behavior of such a mixture to the dye is very much like that of the sap except that with azure B and methylene blue the rise in the pH value of such a mixture is not so pronounced as with sap when the dye penetrates into the vacuoles. Spectrophotometric measurements show that the dye which penetrates from methylene blue solution has a primary absorption maximum at 653 to 655 mµ (i.e., is a mixture of azure B and methylene blue, with preponderance of azure B) whether we take the sap alone or the sap plus protoplasm. These results confirm those previously obtained with spectrophotometric measurements.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Some but not all samples of brilliant cresyl blue (6-methyl-7-dimethylamino-2-phenoxazin chloride) under C. I. No. 51010 in Conn's Biological Stains when dissolved at 1% level in 50–70% alcohol containing 1% concentrated (12 N) hydrochloric acid, stain (in 30 min) a wide variety of human and laboratory animal mucins blue black on an almost unstained background. The mucoprotein of the gastric surface epithelium and of the peptic gland neck cells of several species reacts strongly. A 16 hr 60° C methylation in 0.1 M methyl-sulfuric acid in methanol is required to block the staining of these gastric and some intestinal mucins, while 1–2 hr intervals suffice to prevent the staining of mast cells, cartilage and metachromatic sulfomucins generally. Saponification (1% KOH/70% alcohol, 20min) does not restore staining in either location group, indicating that sulfate mucins are probably reacting in both.Most other basic dyes fail to stain mucins from acid alcohol solutions: azure A, toluidine blue, resorcin blue, orcein, resorufin, azoresorufin brown, azolitmin, lacmoid, gallocyanin, Nile blue, methylene green, pararosanilin, crystal violet, Victoria blue R. Some staining occurred with one of three lots of Victoria blue B, with two lots of Victoria blue 4 R and with one lot each of Bernthsen's methylene violet, elastin violet PR and elastin purple PP.The stain may be preceded by the Feulgen reaction to give red nuclei, or followed by a brief collagen stain in an alcoholic acid fuchsin (0.05–0.1%), picric acid (1.5%) solution.Presented before the Symposium of the Histochemische Gesellschaft in Hamburg, 28. September 1968.Supported by National Cancer Institute Grant No. C-4816, National Institutes of Health.  相似文献   

13.
In this report we describe a simple and rapid staining technique for cartilage and bone embedded in Araldite. Semitbin sections of embryonic vertebrae obtained from 15 to 17 day mouse fetuses were stained using an aqueous solution 0.25% with respect to methylene blue, 0.25% with respect to azure A, and 0.5% with respect to Na2 CO3, then counterstained with 1% aqueous pararosaniline chloride (MAP). Results were compared with toluidine blue stained sections. MAP permitted good discrimination of developmental stages of both cells and extracellular matrix within vertebral ossification centers during endochondral ossification. The technique is simple, rapid and applicable to plastic embedded sections, and can be used prior to ultrastructural examination.  相似文献   

14.
Methylene green as the free dye base dissolved in benzene can be used to stain animal tissues sufficiently during clearing for paraffin embedding to distinguish morphological features. It can therefore be used to allow trimming off unwanted tissues, to orient specimens when casting in wax and to select sections from a wax ribbon. The stain is removed very quickly on contact with water, and has no effect on subsequent staining techniques. The dye base is prepared by adding 2.5 ml of 10% NaOH to 100 ml of 1% aqueous methylene green, mixing well and allowing to stand at 20-30 C for 24 hr. The precipitate is separated by filtration, washed on the paper and dried at 50-55 C. The dry precipitate is dissolved in 200 ml of benzene to make the stock solution, which is diluted with 1 or 2 parts of benzene for tissue blocks, but used undiluted on sections.  相似文献   

15.
The rate of diffusion through the non-aqueous layer of the protoplasm depends largely on the partition coefficients mentioned above. Since these cannot be determined we have employed an artificial system in which chloroform is used in place of the non-aqueous layer of the protoplasm. The partition coefficients may be roughly determined by shaking up the aqueous solutions with chloroform and analyzing with the spectrophotometer (which is necessary with methylene blue because we are dealing with mixtures). This will show what dyes may be expected to pass through the protoplasm into the vacuole in case it behaves like the artificial system. From these results we may conclude that the artificial system and the living cell act almost alike toward methylene blue and azure B, which supports the notion of non-aqueous layers in the protoplasm. There is a close resemblance between Valonia and the artificial system in their behavior toward these dyes at pH 9.5. In the case of Nitella, on the other hand, with methylene blue solution at pH 9.2 the sap in the artificial system takes up relatively more azure B (absorption maximum at 650 mµ) than the vacuole of the living cell (655 mµ). But both take up azure B much more rapidly than methylene blue. A comparison cannot be made between the behavior of the artificial system and that of the living cell at pH 5.5 since in the latter case there arises a question of injury to cells before enough dye is collected in the sap for analysis.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanism of the oxidation of methylene blue varies with the conditions. The formation of trimethyl thionin (azure B) and of asymmetrical dimethyl thionolin (azure A) is followed under alkaline conditions by that of dimethyl thionin (methylene violet) and under acid conditions by that of monomethyl thionin (named by authors azure C).

Simple and practical methods are given for the preparation of azure A and azure C. The latter product, which has not been obtained from methylene blue hitherto, has valuable staining properties as a nuclear and bacterial stain in tissue and may also be employed satisfactorily as a substitute for azure A in the MacNeal tetrachrome formula as a blood stain or substitute for the Giemsa stain.

Azure B has no particular merit in staining.

Azure C proves to be a very valuable stain. A procedure is given for its use with eosin Y and orange II as counterstains, by which it is possible to demonstrate bacteria in tissue and at the same time the cytological elements of the tissue.  相似文献   

17.
Tissues were fixed for 30 min In cold (0-2° C) 1% OsO4 (Palade) buffered at pH 7.7, to which 0.1% MgCl2 was added. Dehydration was in a graded ethanol series (containing 0.5% MgCl2) at 0-2° C, and terminated with 2 changes of absolute ethanol. Tissues were then transferred by a graded series to anhydrous acetone. Infiltration of the tissue with Vestopal-W (a polyester resin), is gradual with the aid of graded solutions of Vestopal-W in acetone. The infiltrated tissue is encapsulated and initial polymerization is done under ultraviolet light at room temperature for 8-16 hr. This is followed by final hardening at 60° C for 36-48 hr. Sections (0.2-1 μ) were cut, dried on slides, placed in acetone for 1 min and then treated by either of the following staining procedures: (1) Thionin-azure-fuchsin staining: Flood the preparation with 0.2% aqueous thionin and heat to 60-80° C for 3 min; if the preparation begins to dry, add stain. Rinse in distilled water. Flood the slide with 0.2% azure B in phosphate buffer at pH 9. Heat to 60-80° C for 3 min; do not permit the preparation to dry. Rinse in distilled water. Dip the slide in MacCallum's variant of Goodpasture's carbol-fuchsin stain for 1-2 sec. Rinse in distilled water. Check the preparation microscopically for intensity of the fuchsin stain. Repeat dips as may be needed to obtain the desired intensity. Rinse in distilled water. Dehydrate quickly in 95% and absolute alcohol; clear in 2 changes of xylene and cover in Permount or similar synthetic resin. (2) Thionin-azure counterstain for the periodic acid-Schiff reaction: Oxidize the tissue in 0.5% periodic acid for 15 min and transfer to Schiff's leucofuchsin solution for 30 min. Counterstain with 0.5% aqueous thionin for 3 min; wash in distilled water; stain in 0.2% azure B in phosphate buffer at pH 5.5; wash in distilled water; dehydrate; clear and cover as in the first method. For temporary preparations let dry after absolute alcohol and apply a drop of immersion oil directly on the section.  相似文献   

18.
A method is offered for he differential diagnosis of cancer cells. It depends on the use of methylene blue decolorized with sodium thiosulfate (denoted here HLM, i.e. “hyposulfite methylene blue”); this is prepared by dissolving 800 mg. sodium thiosulfate in 10 ml. of 0.1% aqueous methylene blue and adding 3-5 drops of dilute (1:3) HCl. Frozen sections are treated with this reagent for 2-3 minutes, rinsed with a large amount of distilled water, then stained 2-3 minutes with 0.05% aqueous acid fuchsin. Staining should be performed in a darkened room. If all due precautions are observed, normal tissue appears blue, malignant tissue red.  相似文献   

19.
The performances of two standardized Romanowsky stains (azure B/eosin and azure B/methylene blue/eosin) have been compared with each other and with a methylene blue/eosin stain. Visible-light absorbance spectra of various hematological substrates have been measured. These have been analyzed in terms of the quantities of bound azure B, methylene blue and eosin dimers and monomers, and in terms of the CIE color coordinates. It has been found that the addition of methylene blue to azure B/eosin produces little change in performance, at least using these two analytical methods. Methylene blue/eosin does not produce the purplish colorations typical of the Romanowsky effect. This is due not to differences between the spectra of methylene blue and azure B, but to the fact that methylene blue does not facilitate the binding of eosin to cellular substrates to the same extent as azure B.  相似文献   

20.
Two new methods applicable to the staining of fixed and fresh frozen tissue sections are presented herein. In addition certain improvements are suggested for the technic reported by Geschickter, Walker, Hjort and Moulton (1931). In brief the procedures are as follows:

The thionin eosinate method of Geschickter et al (1931). This procedure has been modified as follows:

A mixture of diethylene glycol, 40 parts, ethylene glycol, 40 parts, and grain alcohol, 20 parts is superior to ethylene glycol, 80 parts, and ethyl alcohol, 20 parts, as a solvent for the compound stain in that the staining is intensified.

Ethylene glycol monobutyl ether supplants diethylene glycol monobutyl ether because of its lower viscosity.

Ethyl phthalate replaces butyl phthalate on account of a more satisfactory viscosity.

The methyl green eosinate procedure is the same as the modified thionin eosinate method except for the following variations:

The staining time is increased to one minute.

Decolorization and washing are reduced to about 15 seconds.

The hematoxylin-eosin method. After cutting, the tissue sections are carried thru the following steps:

Unfold in water; transfer to formalin (4 to 40%) for at least 30 seconds; stain in hematoxylin (Harris) for 30 to 60 seconds; wash in water, 5 seconds; decolorize in 0.1% HC1 or saturated aqueous picric acid, 5 seconds; wash in water, S seconds; float in 0.5% ammonia, 5 to 10 seconds; wash in water, 5 seconds; stain in 5% aqueous eosin, 15 seconds1; wash in water, 5 to 10 seconds; dehydrate in a mixture of diethylene glycol, 30 parts, and ethyl alcohol, 70 parts, 5 to 10 seconds; dehydrate in ethylene glycol monobutyl ether, 5 to 10 seconds; clear in ethyl phthalate, 5 to 10 seconds; float on a glass slide, blot with photographic lintless blotter, place a drop of neutral gum damar on the section, and cover with glass cover slip.  相似文献   

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