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Osmium dependent argentaffin staining of lysosomes
Authors:W Klein  W Jurecka  P Böck
Institution:(1) Department of Micromorphology and Electron Microscopy, University of Vienna, Schwarzspanierstraße 17, A-1090 Vienna;(2) Department of Dermatology II, University of Vienna, Spitalgasse 4, A-1090 Vienna
Abstract:Summary Lysosomes stain with the argentaffin reaction after fixation with glutaraldehyde followed by osmium tetroxide. The reaction works well both at the level of the light and electron microscope. Control experiments show that this argentaffinity is caused by reduced osmium tetroxide. No staining could be observed in freeze-dried material, in tissues fixed only with glutaraldehyde, or after bleaching of the sections with hydrogen peroxide solutions. In the electron microscope, the population of lysosomes appears heterogeneous as related to the density of silver deposits over the organelles. No correlation is found between size and argentaffinity of lysosomes. X-ray microanalysis of sections from glutaraldehyde/osmium tetroxide fixed material reveals significantly higher amounts of osmium in lysosomes, as compared to other cell organelles (e.g. peroxisomes or mitochondria). A significant peak for silver is observed in lysosomes after treatment of the sections with ammoniacal silver solution, whereas the signal for osmium is reduced. Amounts of sulphur are too low to be detected in lysosomes. It is concluded that argentaffin staining of lysosomes is an osmium dependent reaction.Parts of these results have been presented as a poster during the 20th Congress of Electron Microscopy, joint session of the Austrian Society of Electron Microscopy and the German Society of Electron Microscopy, August 23–28, 1981, Innsbruck, Austria
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