Chloroplast division in spinach leaves examined by scanning electron microscopy and freeze-etching

1980 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-96
Author(s):  
N. Chaly ◽  
J.V. Possingham ◽  
W.W. Thomson

Spinach leaf disks were cultured for 5 days in low-intensity green light and then were transferred to high-intensity white light. Harvests over the next 16 h established that cell area increased by about 80% and chloroplast number per cell increased by about 65%, while the percentage of dumbbell-shaped chloroplasts per cell decreased by 65%. Freeze-etch replicas of fixed and unfixed leaf disks, as well as scanning electron-microscope preparations of fixed material, contained dumbbell-shaped chloroplasts constricted to various degrees. Freeze-etch replicas of unfixed cells from young leaf bases, in which the number of chloroplasts per cell is known to be rapidly increasing, also contained many constricted chloroplasts. It is concluded that dumbbell-shaped chloroplasts occur in vivo and represent a stage in the division of chloroplasts.

Author(s):  
M.J.C. Hendrix ◽  
D.E. Morse

Atrial septal defects are considered the most common congenital cardiac anomaly occurring in humans. In studying the normal sequential development of the atrial septum, chick embryos of the White Leghorn strain were prepared for scanning electron microscopy and the results were then extrapolated to the human heart. One-hundred-eighty chick embryos from 2 to 21 days of age were removed from their shells and immersed in cold cacodylate-buffered aldehyde fixative . Twenty-four embryos through the first week post-hatching were perfused in vivo using cold cacodylate-buffered aldehyde fixative with procaine hydrochloride. The hearts were immediately dissected free and remained in the fixative a minimum of 2 hours. In most cases, the lateral atrial walls were removed during this period. The tissues were then dehydrated using a series of ascending grades of ethanol; final dehydration of the tissues was achieved via the critical point drying method followed by sputter-coating with goldpalladium.


2010 ◽  
Vol 428-429 ◽  
pp. 421-425 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ye Tang Guo ◽  
Yuan Ming Huang

Well known long-persistent phosphorous strontium aluminates were synthesized by conventional combustion method in a furnace at about 600oC. By incorporating the obtained phosphorous strontium aluminates into organic host polystyrene, we prepared the organic-inorganic composite material (i.e., phosphor-polystyrene) which could be cast into flexible and green-light- emitting films. The morphology of the obtained phosphorous strontium aluminates and the phosphorescence of the organic-inorganic composite films were characterized with the scanning electron microscopy and the fluorescence spectroscopy, respectively. Our results show that the organic-inorganic composite films can be used as green-light- emitting roll-able screens in the industry of information displays.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. e57405 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bohumil Maco ◽  
Anthony Holtmaat ◽  
Marco Cantoni ◽  
Anna Kreshuk ◽  
Christoph N. Straehle ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 1151-1167 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuhang Sun ◽  
Zixuan Liu ◽  
Dandan Liu ◽  
Jin Chen ◽  
Fang Gan ◽  
...  

Background/Aims: Swine influenza virus (SIV) is a major pathogen of both animals and humans. Afatoxin B1 (AFB1) is one of the most common mycotoxins in feed and food. However, the central contribution of AFB1 to SIV infection remains unclear. Methods: Here, TCID50 assays, fluorescence-based quantitative real-time PCR, western blotting, immunofluorescence staining, histopathological examination, flow cytometry and scanning electron microscopy were performed to investigate the involvement and underlying mechanism of AFB1 in SIV infection in vivo and in vitro using mouse models and porcine alveolar macrophage (PAM) models, respectively. Results: The in vivo study showed that low levels of AFB1 promoted SIV infection and increased its severity, as demonstrated by the increased mRNA expression of viral matrix protein (M); by the increased protein expression of nucleoprotein (NP), matrix protein 1 and ion channel protein; and by animal weight loss, lung index and lung histologic damage. In addition, the increased occurrence of SIV infection accompanied by increases in the level of IL-10 in sera and lungs, in the spleen index and in the number of CD206-positive mouse alveolar macrophages but decreases in the level of TNF-α in sera and lungs, in the thymus index and in the number of CD80-positive mouse alveolar macrophages was observed in SIV-infected mice after low-level AFB1 exposure. The in vitro study showed that low concentrations of AFB1 promoted SIV infection, as demonstrated by the increases in viral titers and viral M mRNA and NP expression levels in SIV-infected PAMs as well as by the number of cells positive for NP protein expression. Furthermore, AFB1 promoted the polarization of SIV-infected PAMs to the M1 phenotype at 8 hpi and to the M2 phenotype at 24 hpi, as measured by the increases in IL-10 expression and in the number of CD206-positive PAMs as well as by the morphological changes observed by scanning electron microscopy. The administration of the immune stimulant lipopolysaccharide (LPS) reversed the switch in PAM polarization from M2 to M1 and thereby counteracted the promotion of influenza virus infection induced by AFB1. Conclusion: Our results are the first to confirm that low-level exposure to AFB1 promotes SIV infection and modulates a switch in macrophage polarization from M1 to M2. The work reported here provides important data that point to a role for AFB1 in SIV infection, and it opens a new field of study.


1975 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. K. Day ◽  
K. G. A. Glark ◽  
V. V. Kakkar

The lack of a satisfactory in vivo experimental model has probably been responsible for the delay in the clinical application of recent advances in in vitro research on thrombosis. This paper describes a model in which thrombosis is initiated by an electrical stimulus. The thrombus produced has the histological and biochemical features of human deep vein thrombosis (DVT).The minimum stimulus necessary to induce thrombosis was first determined by passing a fixed current for timed intervals along the femoral veins of 10 rabbits. Thrombi were seen 24 hours later if the total charge passed exceeded a threshold value of 25 millicoulombes. With this small current, no endothelial changes were visible immediately after the passage of the charge on light or scanning electron microscopy. At 24 hours a mural thrombus formed, which had fully cross-linked fibrin and histological features resembling human DVT.In the second series of experiments, the sequence of changes occurring in thrombus production was investigated in 3 groups of 18 rabbits each. After passage of the critical charge along the femoral vein in each animal, veins were removed at fixed intervals, the contralateral vein acting as a control. The veins were examined by scanning electron-microscopy (Group I), transmission electron-microscopy (Group II) and light microscopy (Group III), The earliest changes were detectable at 5 minutes and consisted of the laying down of an organised structure of criss-crossing fibrin strands with small platelet clumps at fibrin intersections. Later the fibrin structure spread towards the lumen; platelet clumps fused and a coralline thrombus was formed by 24 hours. The significance of these changes will be discussed.


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