Immunoperoxidase Methods for the Localization of Antigens in Cultured Cells and Tissue Sections by Electron Microscopy

Author(s):  
WILLIAM J. BROWN ◽  
MARILYN G. FARQUHAR
1986 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Gorbsky ◽  
G G Borisy

Reversible embedment cytochemistry (REC) is a new method for revealing cellular ultrastructure and for improving access of intracellular targets to macromolecular affinity labels. Fully polymerized polymethylmethacrylate was dissolved in dichloromethane and infiltrated into fixed tissue-culture cells and tissues. After evaporation of the solvent, samples were left in hard plastic. Samples were thus embedded without exposure to chemical polymerization reactions that might damage tissue ultrastructure or antigenicity. Glass or diamond knives fitted with water troughs were used to cut sections 30-1000 nm thick. Since polymethylmethacrylate is composed of linear polymers that are not covalently crosslinked, the plastic was easily extracted from the sections by immersion in solvent. Subsequently, various preparative methods, including negative staining, critical point-drying, and platinum-carbon rotary shadowing, were used to provide detailed images of well-preserved cell structure for conventional and high-voltage transmission electron microscopy. Fluorescein-conjugated affinity labels were used to obtain subcellular distributions of target molecules in semi-thick sections of cultured cells and tissues for light microscopy. Colloidal gold-labeled antibodies were used to localize microtubules in sections of cultured cells by electron microscopy. REC is a versatile method that should find wide application in many studies of cellular function.


1995 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 12-13
Author(s):  
W. Gray (Jay) Jerome

The ability to view thick material using accelerating voltages higher than 100 KeV has greatly expanded the usefulness of electron microscopy. At or above 300 KeV, intact cultured cells and tissue sections as thick as 5µm can be visualized. However, under normal viewing conditions this increased depth produces confusing superposition of structures located at different planes along the Z axis. In order to separate spatial information in different planes, specialized procedures such as stereo pairs or animated tilt series have been employed. Although rapid, these procedures do not allow quantitation of parameters such as size, volume, or circumference. Computed Tomography produces a computer generated 3-D reconstruction from which quantitative data can be easily extracted.


Author(s):  
Frederick A. Murphy ◽  
Alyne K. Harrison ◽  
Sylvia G. Whitfield

The bullet-shaped viruses are currently classified together on the basis of similarities in virion morphology and physical properties. Biologically and ecologically the member viruses are extremely diverse. In searching for further bases for making comparisons of these agents, the nature of host cell infection, both in vivo and in cultured cells, has been explored by thin-section electron microscopy.


Author(s):  
Joseph M. Harb ◽  
James T. Casper ◽  
Vlcki Piaskowski

The application of tissue culture and the newer methodologies of direct cloning and colony formation of human tumor cells in soft agar hold promise as valuable modalities for a variety of diagnostic studies, which include morphological distinction between tumor types by electron microscopy (EM). We present here two cases in which cells in culture expressed distinct morphological features not apparent in the original biopsy specimen. Evaluation of the original biopsies by light and electron microscopy indicated both neoplasms to be undifferentiated sarcomas. Colonies of cells propagated in soft agar displayed features of rhabdomyoblasts in one case, and cultured cells of the second biopsy expressed features of Ewing's sarcoma.


1968 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 698-715 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. W. Israel ◽  
M. M. Salpeter ◽  
F. C. Steward

Cultured carrot explants, stimulated to grow rapidly in a medium containing coconut milk, were labeled with radioactive proline. After an initial period of absorption (8 hr for proline-3H; 24 hr for proline-14C) the tissue was allowed to grow for a further period of 6 days in a similar medium free from the radioactivity. Samples were prepared for electron microscopy and radioautography at the end of the absorption period and also after the further growth. The distribution of the products from the radioactive proline in the cells is shown by high-resolution radioautography and is rendered quantitative for the different regions of the cells. The results show that the combined label, which was present in the form of proline and the hydroxyproline derived from it, was all in the protoplasm, not in the cell walls. Any combined label that appeared to be over the cell walls is shown to be due to scatter from adjacent cytoplasmic sites. Initially the radioactivity was concentrated in nuclei, even more so in nucleoli, but it subsequently appeared throughout the ground cytoplasm and was also concentrated in the plastids. The significance of these observations for the general concept of a plant cell wall protein and for the special problem of growth induction in otherwise quiescent cells is discussed.


1977 ◽  
Vol 52 (5) ◽  
pp. 249-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael A. Gorycki ◽  
Valerie Askanas

1975 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
A. Pleshkewych ◽  
L. Levine

A prominent cytoplasmic inclusion present in living mouse primary spermatocytes has been observed by both light and electron microscopy. It began to form at prometaphase and continued to increase in thickness and length as the cells developed. By metaphase it was a distinct sausage-shaped boundary that enclosed a portion of the cytoplasm between the spindle and the cell membrane. At the end of metaphase, the inclusion reached its maximum length. At telophase, it was divided between the daughter secondaries. The inclusion persisted as a circular contour in the interphase secondary spermatocyte. Electron microscopy of the same cultured cells that were previously observed with light microscopy revealed that the inclusion was a distinctive formation of membranes. It consisted of agranular cisternae and vesicles, and was therefore a membranous complex. Many of the smaller vesicles in the membranous complex resembled those found in the spindle. The cisternae in the membranous complex were identical to the cisternal endoplasmic reticulum of interphase primary spermatocytes. Nevertheless, the organization of vesicles and cisternae into the membranous complex was unique for the primaries in division stages, since such an organization was not present in their interphase stages.


1974 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 253-261
Author(s):  
J. JACOB ◽  
KATHERINE GILLIES ◽  
D. MACLEOD ◽  
K. W. JONES

The feasibility of in situ hybridization in tissue sections prepared for electron microscopy has been examined using mouse satellite DNA-complementary RNA and mouse L cells. The results obtained are encouraging, although certain technical aspects require further clarification. In interphase cells, hybrid-forming sites occur in chromatin patches positioned along the nuclear envelope. It is also confirmed that satellite DNA occurs in nucleolus-associated chromatin. The results suggest that satellite sequences are present in intranucleolar and peri-nucleolar chromatin. A similar distribution is indicated for ribosomal cistrons.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document