Identification of carrageenan in mammalian tissues: An analytical and histochemical study |
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Authors: | S. D. Gangolli M. G. Wright P. Grasso |
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Affiliation: | (1) The British Industrial Biological Research Association, Carshalton |
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Abstract: | Synopsis Methods have been developed for the analytical estimation and histochemical demonstration of carrageeman in the granuloma induced in rats and guinea-pigs by subcutaneous injection of degraded carrageenan.The analytical method for the determination of carrageenan in tissues involved a preliminary clean-up procedure. The tissues were defatted by solvent extraction and incubated with papain and trypsin to remove proteins. Carrageenan and naturally occurring acid mucopolysaccharides were isolated using cetyl pyridinium chloride. The subsequent separation and estimation of carrageenan was carried out by electrophoresis on cellulose acetate paper. Following electrophoresis the cellulose acetate strips were incubated with hyaluronidase to remove acid mucopolysaccharides, and stained with Toluidine Blue. The stained band corresponding to pure degraded carrageenan was quantitated on a scanning densitometer. The method was capable of detecting 0.25 g of degraded carrageenan in tissue.The most suitable method for the histochemical demonstration of carrageenan in paraffin embedded tissues was found to be Alcian Blue at either pH 1 or a CEC (critical electrolyte concentration) of 1.0 M MgCl2 (pH 5.8). At this pH or CEC, both the carrageenan and the strongly acidic glycosaminoglycans were stained. Prior digestion with hyaluronidase and neuraminidase eliminated the staining of the tissue polysaccharides so that the carrageenan could be visualized within macrophages and in the extracellular space. Mast cell granules retained their staining properties after mucolytic digestion; but morphologically, mast cells could be distinguished from macrophages containing carrageenan. |
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