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1.
The ordinary Feulgen-squash technic, after acetic-alcohol fixation, provides a simple and reliable method of preparing many mammalian tissues for chromosome counts. Tissues best suited to the technic were the seminiferous tubules. Small pieces of tissue about 3-6 mm. long and 1-2 mm. wide were immersed in a freshly made fixative (composed of 3 parts absolute ethyl alcohol and 1 part glacial acetic acid) immediately after removal by biopsy or from a freshly killed animal. After fixation for 3-12 hours the tissue was stained by the standard Feulgen procedure after hydrolysis for 12 minutes in normal HCl at 60 °C A 1-2 mm. piece was then teased apart on a slide in 45% acetic acid with a pair of mounted needles, and the teased tissue was squashed between the slide and the cover slip. During squashing the pressure was applied by hand and was regulated so as to avoid any excessive scattering of the chromosomes. The preparations were made permanent by dehydrating and mounting in Euparal.  相似文献   

2.
Removal of the cover slip from squash preparations, for coating with auto-radiographic emulsion, or other purposes, is made easy if squashing is performed with a piece of Scotch double-coated adhesive tape No. 665, used as a cover slip. The material to be squashed is placed on a slide lightly coated with an adhesive consisting of 1% gelatin with 0.1% chrome alum added. The piece of tape is applied with the surface originally on the outside of the roll next to the specimen. Specimens should be soaked before squashing in aqueous 45% acetic acid, with or without added dye, such as carmine or orcein. After squashing, the tape is easily removed without damage to the cells. This allows autoradiographic emulsion to be applied, or, unstained material can be stained after squashing by technics suitable for microtome sections.  相似文献   

3.
Membranes are formed by allowing a drop of collodion-acetone solution to come into contact with the surface of warm sugar solution in a petri dish. Pollen is germinated upon the smooth areas of the membrane when all traces of acetone have evaporated. Semipermanent preparations are made by isolating the pollinated area of the membrane, floating it onto a slide, and, after the removal of excess sugar solution, adding a drop of acetic-stain fixative, followed by an albumenized cover slip. The preparation can be made permanent by inverting a slide in a mixture of 1 part glacial acetic acid and 3 parts absolute alcohol, when the collodion membrane will dissolve and allow the cover slip and adhering grains to fall free. The cover slip is then passed through absolute alcohol (2 changes), xylene, and mounted in neutral mountant on a clean slide. By substituting a drop of the alcohol-acetic acid mixture in place of acetic-stain fixative, the grains adhering to the cover slip may be stained by the Feulgen method.  相似文献   

4.
Anthers of small chromosome plants (Antirrhinum, Brassica, Capsicum etc.) were fixed 12 hours or longer at 0–3° C. in: ferric acetate in glacial acetic acid (sat. soln.), 1 part; absolute alcohol, 3 parts. They were transferred to: ferric acetate (sat. soln.) in 45% acetic acid, 3 parts; 45% acetic acid, 5 parts; 1% formalin (aq.), 2 parts, and allowed to remain 5–15 minutes at room temperature for mordanting. The amount of iron introduced into the specimens was controllable by the time in the mordanting fluid. After rinsing the specimen in 45% acetic acid and macerating in a drop of Belling's acetocarmine on a slide, a cover slip was applied followed by warming and pressing with blotting paper to flatten the pollen mother cells and expel excess stain. Preparations stored temporarily by sealing the edges of the cover slip with rubber solution were best made permanent by removing the cover slip after 1–2 days, dehydrating and mounting in euparal.  相似文献   

5.
Anthers of small chromosome plants (Antirrhinum, Brassica, Capsicum etc.) were fixed 12 hours or longer at 0-3° C. in: ferric acetate in glacial acetic acid (sat. soln.), 1 part; absolute alcohol, 3 parts. They were transferred to: ferric acetate (sat. soln.) in 45% acetic acid, 3 parts; 45% acetic acid, 5 parts; 1% formalin (aq.), 2 parts, and allowed to remain 5-15 minutes at room temperature for mordanting. The amount of iron introduced into the specimens was controllable by the time in the mordanting fluid. After rinsing the specimen in 45% acetic acid and macerating in a drop of Belling's acetocarmine on a slide, a cover slip was applied followed by warming and pressing with blotting paper to flatten the pollen mother cells and expel excess stain. Preparations stored temporarily by sealing the edges of the cover slip with rubber solution were best made permanent by removing the cover slip after 1-2 days, dehydrating and mounting in euparal.  相似文献   

6.
Methods are proposed for staining plant chromosomes with the dye brilliant cresyl blue, and for making these stained preparations permanent by using polyvinyl alcohol mounting medium.

The stain, which is composed of 2% brilliant cresyl blue in 45% aqueous acetic or propionic acid, is used with fixed material in making smear preparations. The technics for staining are similar to those employed in the aceto-carmine method.

The mounting medium is made by mixing 56% polyvinyl alcohol, which is diluted in water to the consistency of thick molasses, with 22% lactic acid and 22% phenol by volume. The permanent slides are made by floating off the cover slip of the temporary slide in 70% alcohol, then applying the mounting medium and replacing the cover slip.

The chief advantages of the methods described are:

1)The preparation of the stain is rapid and simple. The batch of stain will be good with the first try.

2)The staining procedure in some instances is shorter than when using aceto-carmine.

3)The stain shows a high degree of specificity for nuclear structures and gives better results than aceto-carmine when used on certain plant tissues.

4)A minimum number of cells is lost in making the slides permanent when using polyvinyl alcohol mounting medium as the slide and cover slip are run through only one solution prior to mounting.

5)The mounting medium dries rapidly and this shortens the time required before critical examination of the permanent mounts can be made.  相似文献   

7.
Preparations obtained by the aceto-iron-haematoxylin technique reported previously (Stain Tech., 37, 27-30, 1962) can be made relatively permanent either by ringing the cover slip with Karo corn syrup, or by mounting the squash in this syrup after separating slide and cover slip by the solid CO2 freezing technique. In the latter procedure, both slide and cover slip may be placed briefly in 45% acetic acid for further differentiation of the stain, then recombined with a drop of syrup.  相似文献   

8.
A technic was developed which resulted in preparations containing many mitotic divisions with chromosomes well fixed and stained, rod-shaped, and spread throughout the cell. This technic has given good results with guayule (Parthenium argentatum), Crepis, Allium, Pisum, Lycopersicon, Tradescantia, and other plants. Material is prefixed in a saturated solution of paradichlorobenzene for 1-4 hours, fixed in 65% acetic acid (or other suitable fixative) for 12-24 hours, hydrolyzed in 10% HCl for 10-30 minutes at 60° C, rinsed in water, transferred to a drop of 45% acetic acid on a slide, and smeared and stained in aceto-orcein. The preparation may be made permanent by separating slide and cover glass in 1 part glacial acetic acid to 1 part absolute alcohol, putting them in absolute alcohol, and then recombining them with a drop of euparol.  相似文献   

9.
Cells derived from cultures of bone marrow or leucocytes were treated with hypotonic citrate solution, squashed in 45% acetic acid frozen with CO2 to allow removal of the cover glass without disturbing the smear, and stained by the following schedule: absolute alcohol, 5 min; coat with 0.2% parlodion and air dry; 70% alcohol, 5 min; distilled water, 5 min; stain 2-5 min in a mixture of 45 ml of a 0.3% solution of basic fuchsin in 5% phenol, 6 ml of glacial acetic acid, and 6 ml of 37% formaldehyde. Differentiate and dehydrate in absolute alcohol, clear in xylene and cover. The stain is durable for several weeks if slides are stored in darkness when not in use. Results resemble those obtained by Feulgen or aceto-orcein methods.  相似文献   

10.
Anthers are collected and placed in a solution of 1 part acetic acid to 3 parts of absolute alcohol. The contents of the anther are squeezed out on a slide in a drop of Belling's iron-aceto-carmin solution and a cover glass placed over the drop. Care should be taken to remove all anther walls and flower parts. Heat the slide over an alcohol flame for a second, repeating 4 or 5 times. Place the slide in a petri dish filled with a 10% solution of acetic acid. When the cover glass has risen away from the slide gently remove the cover glass and place in a Coplin jar containing equal parts of alcohol and acetic acid. Likewise, place the slide in this solution. Run both cover and slide thru the following solutions: 1 part acetic acid to 3 parts absolute alcohol, 1 part acetic acid to 9 parts absolute alcohol, absolute alcohol and finally equal parts of absolute alcohol and xylol. Recombine the cover and slide in xylol-balsam directly from this solution.  相似文献   

11.
Anthers are collected and placed in a solution of 1 part acetic acid to 3 parts of absolute alcohol. The contents of the anther are squeezed out on a slide in a drop of Belling's iron-aceto-carmin solution and a cover glass placed over the drop. Care should be taken to remove all anther walls and flower parts. Heat the slide over an alcohol flame for a second, repeating 4 or 5 times. Place the slide in a petri dish filled with a 10% solution of acetic acid. When the cover glass has risen away from the slide gently remove the cover glass and place in a Coplin jar containing equal parts of alcohol and acetic acid. Likewise, place the slide in this solution. Run both cover and slide thru the following solutions: 1 part acetic acid to 3 parts absolute alcohol, 1 part acetic acid to 9 parts absolute alcohol, absolute alcohol and finally equal parts of absolute alcohol and xylol. Recombine the cover and slide in xylol-balsam directly from this solution.  相似文献   

12.
The following rapid but reliable method of making permanent preparations from temporary mounts has proved to be very useful.

Pollen mother-cell smears: Smeared anthers are treated hi the usual way with Belting's acetocarmine, except that the cover slip is left off. When correct differentiation is attained the stain is thoroly washed off with 50% acetic acid and the slide flooded with dioxan. This is followed by 2 changes of dioxan for 2 minutes each. A drop of Canada balsam dissolved in dioxan is added and a cover slip applied. In cases where a cover slip has been used at the acetocarmine stage it can be floated off in a staining jar of 50% acetic acid and dehydration with dioxan carried out as above.

Insect salivary gland chromosome smears: The glands are crushed under a cover slip in acetocarmine on a slide coated with dried egg albumen. After 20 minutes the area around the cover slip is flooded with 50% acetic acid and the cover slip floats loose so that it can be removed. The above described dioxan dehydrating procedure is then employed.

Squash preparations: Root tips are fixed in some suitable fixative and the Feulgen technic applied. The stained root tips can either be dehydrated by passing thru 3 changes of dioxan and mounting in dioxan-balsam where they are divided into small longitudinal sections by sharp needles, or they can be put immediately into a mixture of 1 part of 50% acetic acid to 1 part of corn syrup where shredding with needles is carried out. A cover slip is put on and separation of the cells completed by tamping or by applying pressure to the cover. This squash method is useful with anthers which are difficult to smear when in the early prophase stages of meiosis.  相似文献   

13.
The following rapid but reliable method of making permanent preparations from temporary mounts has proved to be very useful.

Pollen mother-cell smears: Smeared anthers are treated hi the usual way with Belting's acetocarmine, except that the cover slip is left off. When correct differentiation is attained the stain is thoroly washed off with 50% acetic acid and the slide flooded with dioxan. This is followed by 2 changes of dioxan for 2 minutes each. A drop of Canada balsam dissolved in dioxan is added and a cover slip applied. In cases where a cover slip has been used at the acetocarmine stage it can be floated off in a staining jar of 50% acetic acid and dehydration with dioxan carried out as above.

Insect salivary gland chromosome smears: The glands are crushed under a cover slip in acetocarmine on a slide coated with dried egg albumen. After 20 minutes the area around the cover slip is flooded with 50% acetic acid and the cover slip floats loose so that it can be removed. The above described dioxan dehydrating procedure is then employed.

Squash preparations: Root tips are fixed in some suitable fixative and the Feulgen technic applied. The stained root tips can either be dehydrated by passing thru 3 changes of dioxan and mounting in dioxan-balsam where they are divided into small longitudinal sections by sharp needles, or they can be put immediately into a mixture of 1 part of 50% acetic acid to 1 part of corn syrup where shredding with needles is carried out. A cover slip is put on and separation of the cells completed by tamping or by applying pressure to the cover. This squash method is useful with anthers which are difficult to smear when in the early prophase stages of meiosis.  相似文献   

14.
A simple method for distinguishing fish populations using monogenean sclerites is described. Monogeneans are left in a drop of 45% acetic acid on a microscope slide for a few minutes, and squashed under a cover slip to spread the hamuli and genital hooks in one plane. Hamuli and hooks are then measured with the aid of measuring eyepieces. Measurements of sclerites of Kuhnia and Pseudokuhnia fixed directly in 10% formalin or fixed in 10% formalin after freezing for several days gave the same results. Prerequisites for the use of the method are that monogeneans occur in sufficient numbers and show distinct geographical variation. The method is easiest to use if the size of sclerites does not change with body growth. Kuhnia scombri (Monogenea: Polyopisthocotylea) from the mackerel, Scomber australasicus , in New Zealand and New South Wales differ significantly in the length of the hamuli; it is concluded that there may be different populations of mackerel at the two localities. There also are different populations of Scomber japonicus in Japan and Ecuador, and sympatric populations of S. japonicus and S. australasicus in Japan harbour identical populations of the monogeneans Pseudokuhnia minor and Kuhnia sprostonae.  相似文献   

15.
Anthers containing actively dividing pollen grains were treated 1 hour at 18-20° C. with 0.2% solution of colchicine, washed 1 hour in water, soaked in 0.002 M aqueous solution of 8-oxyquinoline at 10-14° C. for 1 hour, washed in water for 1 hour and then fixed in Carnoy's solution (alcohol, chloroform, acetic acid, 6:3:1) for 6 hours to overnight. They were washed successively in acetic-alcohol (1:1) 10-15 minutes, 70% alcohol 10-15 minutes and in water 30 minutes before hydrolysing them in bulk in 1 N HCl at 60° C. for 10-15 minutes. “Finally, they were stained in leuco-basic fuchsin for 15-30 minutes. Pollen grains were squeezed out of a stained anther in a small drop of egg albumen on a slide and the albumen smeared uniformly on the slide. The slide was dipped successively for a few seconds in glacial acetic acid and 45% acetic acid respectively. The smear was covered by a cover glass in a drop of aceto-carmine and pressed gently between folded filter papers. The cover glass was sealed with paraffin and stored overnight. To make the preparation permanent the paraffin was removed and the cover glass separated in a 1:1 mixture of acetic acid and n-butyl alcohol. The slide and the cover glass were then passed through n-butyl alcohol, 2 changes, and finally remounted in balsam.  相似文献   

16.
A procedure for elimination of cytoplasmic debris from Vicia faba root tip cells is: (1) a root tip previously fixed in 3:1 absolute alcohol-acetic acid and stained by the Feulgen method is placed on a slide and squashed in a small drop of water, (2) a cover slip is applied and the cells are flattened with a hand-operated lever device supplying 35 pounds pressure onto a 22 × 22 mm cover glass, (3) the slide is quick-frozen, the cover slip is removed, and the slide is dropped immediately into water, (4) the slide is cleared through an alcohol-xylene dehydration series and permanently mounted. The significant result of this procedure is the consistent presence of clear, flat cells showing excellent definition of chromosomes.  相似文献   

17.
Germinating pollen on stigmas and pollen tubes in styles of Antirrhinum, Brassica, Oenothera, Raphanus, Rosa, solatium and Tagetes spp. were prepared for examination as follows: The styles were fixed in ethyl alcohol-acetic acid 3:1 for 1 hr, and hydrolyzed at 60°C for 5 to 60 min (depending on the species) in 45% acetic acid. The stigma with its attached strand(s) of stigmatoid tissue was then dissected out under a stereoscopic microscope, placed in a few drops of a staining solution made by dissolving 150 mg of safranin O and 20 mg of aniline blue in 25 ml of hot 45% acetic acid. After 5-15 min in this stain, the tissue was placed in a fresh drop of stain on a microscope slide and gently squashed under a cover glass. Because of a gradual precipitation of the aniline blue component, the stain had to be filtered regularly before use. However, a staining solution could be kept at room temperature for several weeks.  相似文献   

18.
Fresh young root tips or free-hand cross sections thereof were placed in 0.002 M 8-oxyquinoline (aq.) at 10-14oC. for 3 hours. After rinsing in water 1-2 minutes, they were soaked in N HC1 at 55oC. for 25 minutes, rinsed again and squashed under a cover glass on a dry slide. Slide and cover glass were separated by placing in 70% alcohol and allowed to remain therein at least 0.5 hour after separation. Both slide and cover glass were passed through 50% and 30% alcohol to water and stained by the Feulgen procedure (without further hydrolysis) or with crystal violet after mordanting in 1% chromic acid overnight and washing in running water 3-4 hours. Dehydration and mounting in balsam completed the process. The smear on the slide was covered with a clean cover glass and the cover glass, bearing stained material, mounted separately.  相似文献   

19.
It is very difficult to make satisfactory smear preparations of species in the Cucurbitaceae by ordinary methods because, (a) the differentiation between chromosomes and cytoplasm is poor, (b) the pollen mother cells are held together in tissue-like masses, (c) the chromosomes are comparatively small and numerous. Special procedures have been devised to overcome these difficulties. Staminate buds selected at the proper stage of maturity are fixed for a period of 12 to 24 hours in a mixture composed of 3 parts of 100% ethyl alcohol and 1 part acetocarmine to which a small quantity of iron acetate has been added. After prefixation the material is rinsed in several changes of 100% alcohol. It can then be transferred directly to the slide for smearing, or hydrated to 70% alcohol for storage. For smearing the anthers are dissected out, the extraneous flower parts discarded, and the storage fluid removed. A drop of acetocarmine diluted to one-half strength with 45% glacial acetic acid is added, and the anthers are macerated into small pieces and smeared. The anther debris is removed, and the cover slip added. It is necessary to carry out the above operations with a low power binocular microscope. After heating the cover slip can be sealed with Pyseal for temporary storage.  相似文献   

20.
Epidermis stripped from either fresh or fixed plant organs, or sections of paraffin-embedded or fresh material are placed on a slide and covered with a drop or two of iron-acetocarmine. The stain is intensified by warming the slide over a flame. After a few minutes a drop or two of a saturated solution of Sudan black B in 45% acetic acid is added and a cover slip applied. The preparations cannot be made permanent, but last a few weeks if sealed with a compound such as gum mastic-paraffin, or if the combined stain is drained off and a drop of Karo syrup is added before the cover slip is applied. The acetocarmine produces its usual staining effects, i.e., nuclei dark red and some components of the cytoplasm of certain cells a less intense red. The Sudan black B colors lipid structures an intense blue.  相似文献   

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