Current Status of Electron Microscopic Cytochemistry

Author(s):  
Kazuo Ogawa
Author(s):  
K. Florian Klemp ◽  
J.R. Guyton

The earliest distinctive lesions in human atherosclerosis are fatty streaks (FS), characterized initially by lipid-laden foam cell formation. Fibrous plaques (FP), the clinically significant lesions, differ from FS in several respects. In addition to foam cells, the FP also exhibit fibromuscular proliferation and a necrotic core region rich in extracellular lipid. The possible transition of FS into mature FP has long been debated, however. A subset of FS described by Katz etal., was intermediate in lipid composition between ordinary FS and FP. We investigated this hypothesis by electron microscopic cytochemistry by employing a tissue processing technique previously described by our laboratory. Osmium-tannic acid-paraphenylenediamine (OTAP) tissue preparation enabled ultrastructural analysis of lipid deposits to discern features characteristic of mature fibrous plaques.


Author(s):  
Dong Yuming ◽  
Yang Guanglin ◽  
Du Wei Dong ◽  
Xu Ai Liam

The activities and distributions of AKPase ,ACPase,G6Pase,TPPase and COase in human normal gastric mucosa and gastric cancer tissues were studied histochemically at light microscopic level. These enzymes are the marker enzymes of cell membrane lysosome endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus and mitochondrion objectively. On the basis of the research we set up a special ultrastructural cytochemical technique and first researched into gastric cancer domesticly. Ultrastructural cytochemistry is also called electron microscopic cytochemistry. This new technique possesses both the sensitivity of cytochemical reaction andi the high resolution of electron microscope. It is characterized by direct observation,exact localization and the combination morphology with function.The distributions of AKPase,ACPase,G6Pase,TPPase and COase in 14 cases of gastric cancer and 1 case of gastric Denign lesion were studied ultrastructurally. The results showed: 1. normal gastric epithelium had no AKPase reaction. The reaction of ACPase,G6Pase,TPPase and Coase were found in the corresponding organella, which were consistent with their function.


Development ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 79 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-51
Author(s):  
Laura Conti Devirgiliis ◽  
Luciana Dini ◽  
Salvatore Russo-Caia

The ontogeny of asialoglycoprotein receptor was investigated by electron microscopic cytochemistry in hepatocytes isolated from foetal and adult rat. The binding capacity for asialofetuin coupled to horseradish peroxidase was lacking before the 18th day of intrauterine life; it arises at this time and increases with developmental age. The ligand-receptor complexes form small patches. The distribution pattern of positivity is very similar in pre and postnatal age, covering the entire cell surface. These results indicate a rather late appearance of the galactose-binding capacity related to the asialoglycoprotein clearance function, which is typical of adult mammalian liver.


1982 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 364-370 ◽  
Author(s):  
N Fox ◽  
G P Studzinski

We have recently demonstrated by electron microscopic cytochemical methods that unfixed human fibroblasts exhibit intense MG2+ dependent adenosine triphosphatase (nATPase) activity in circumscribed areas of the cell nucleoli. The nATPase was specific for ATP and dATP and was inhibited by other ribonucleoside triphosphates. Its intranucleolar localization relative to nucleolar chromatin, and segregation into nucleolar zones after actinomycin treatment of the cells, suggested that the reaction took place in fibrillar centers. This ATPase has now been further characterized by electron microscopic cytochemistry. It was determined that short fixation permitted retention of most of the ATPase activity, and that the enzyme was active at high ionic strength (up to 400 mM KCl), but that the enzyme activity was very sensitive to elevated temperatures. DNA dependence of the enzyme was shown by inhibition of the reaction by DNase pretreatment in parallel with the removal of DNA from the cell, while pretreatment with RNase had no significant effect. The nATPase activity was also selectively inhibited by treatment of the cells with antagonists of the B subunit of DNA gyrase, novobiocin, and coumermycin, but not by nalidixic or oxolinic acids, which interfere with the A subunit of gyrase. Inhibitors of RNA synthesis, actinomycin D and aminonucleoside of puromycin, potentiate rather than inhibit nATPase reaction. The results suggest that nATPase functions to alter the degree of supercoiling or catenation of nucleolar organizer DNA, and is in reality a DNA topoisomerase that hydrolyzes ATP during its action.


1981 ◽  
Vol 29 (11) ◽  
pp. 1263-1272 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Shio ◽  
P B Lazarow

The theoretical advantages of electron microscopic cytochemistry were utilized to look for evidence of possible connections between peroxisomes and the endoplasmic reticulum in rat liver. Established cytochemical procedures for catalase (peroxisomes) and glucose-6-phosphatase (endoplasmic reticulum) were carried out, and evidence was sought of diffusion of reaction products between the organelles. No such diffusion was observed: lead phosphate was found in the endoplasmic reticulum and in the nuclear envelope but not in peroxisomes; oxidized diaminobenzidine (DAB) was seen only in peroxisomes. In addition, both types of cytochemistry were carried out on the same tissue. The two kinds of reaction product could be distinguished by virtue of their different electron opacities. No mixing of the two reaction products was observed. These results do not support the hypothesis that peroxisomes and endoplasmic reticulum may be connected; rather, they support the idea that the two organelles exist as separate cellular compartments.


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