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Histochemical Differentiation of Chloride from Other Ions Precipitated by Silver Nitrate in Freeze-Substitution Fixation
Authors:A Van Harreveld  R L Potter
Institution:  a Kerckhoff Laboratories of the Biological Services, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif
Abstract:The method is based on substitution fixation at —25° C of quickly frozen tissue with a 90% alcohol solution saturated with silver nitrate. The silver salts are photochemically reduced in the histological preparations. At this low temperature very little staining of the protein structure of the tissue takes place. Silver ions adsorbed by the tissue can be removed by treatment with a sodium nitrate solution. About 2/3 of the brown material in the histological preparations of cerebral cortex was due to the chloride in the tissue, 1/6 to the phosphate, 1/10 to an unidentified (probably organic) anion, and 1/20 to bicarbonate. When the alcoholic silver nitrate solution used for the fixation is acidified, or the sections are treated with nitric acid, the colored material consists of reduced silver chloride only. A comparison of the light absorption in histological preparations of cortex treated with neutral and with acid solutions supported the conclusion that about 2/3 of the colored material in the tissue is reduced silver chloride.
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