Polystyrene Embedding: A New Method for Light and Electron Microscopy |
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Authors: | Giuliano Frangioni Gianfranco Borgioli |
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Affiliation: | a Institute of Comparative Anatomy, General Biology and Genetics, Florence, Italy |
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Abstract: | Polystyrene embedments of histological specimens can be Obtained with a solution 1 : 4 polystyrene-toluene, 5% benzyl alcohol and 1% dibutyl phthalate, allowing the solvent to evaporate in polyethylene containers for 2-3 days at 58 C. The resulting blocks are easily cut into truncated pyramids, each containing a piece of tissue. which are then glued to a Plexiglas support Drying is completed at 80 C for 20 hr. The pyramids can then be sectioned to produce thick sections, with a steel knife or to produce semi- or ultrathin sections with a glass knife. A 10% paraldehyde solution is used to mount the light microscopy dons on a slide heated on a hot plate to 80 C; those can be treated with the same techniques used with paraffin sections. The results are of high quality. Semithin sections of tissues fired for electron microscopy can be stained directly after mounting, or by a wider range of stains once the polystyrene has been removed by organic solvents. In electron-microscopy, the ultrathin sections obtained with the usual techniques are highly electron beam-resistant and give acceptable results. |
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