Immunohistochemistry in Drosophila: Sections and Whole Mounts

2007 ◽  
pp. 533-548
Author(s):  
Charlotte Helfrich-Förster
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Robert Glaeser ◽  
Thomas Bauer ◽  
David Grano

In transmission electron microscopy, the 3-dimensional structure of an object is usually obtained in one of two ways. For objects which can be included in one specimen, as for example with elements included in freeze- dried whole mounts and examined with a high voltage microscope, stereo pairs can be obtained which exhibit the 3-D structure of the element. For objects which can not be included in one specimen, the 3-D shape is obtained by reconstruction from serial sections. However, without stereo imagery, only detail which remains constant within the thickness of the section can be used in the reconstruction; consequently, the choice is between a low resolution reconstruction using a few thick sections and a better resolution reconstruction using many thin sections, generally a tedious chore. This paper describes an approach to 3-D reconstruction which uses stereo images of serial thick sections to reconstruct an object including detail which changes within the depth of an individual thick section.


1984 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 203s-208s ◽  
Author(s):  
E G Fey ◽  
D G Capco ◽  
G Krochmalnic ◽  
S Penman

Cytoskeletal structures obtained after extraction of Madin-Darby canine kidney epithelial cell monolayers with Triton X-100 were examined in transmission electron micrographs of cell whole mounts and unembedded thick sections. The cytoskeleton, an ordered structure consisting of a peripheral plasma lamina, a complex network of filaments, and chromatin-containing nuclei, was revealed after extraction of intact cells with a nearly physiological buffer containing Triton X-100. The cytoskeleton was further fractionated by extraction with (NH4)2SO4, which left a structure enriched in intermediate filaments and desmosomes around the nuclei. A further digestion with nuclease and elution with (NH4)2SO4 removed the chromatin. The stable structure that remained after this procedure retained much of the epithelial morphology and contained essentially all of the cytokeratin filaments and desmosomes and the chromatin-depleted nuclear matrices. This structural network may serve as a scaffold for epithelial organization. The cytoskeleton and the underlying nuclear matrix intermediate filament scaffold, when examined in both conventional embedded thin sections and in unembedded whole mounts and thick sections, showed the retention of many of the detailed morphological aspects of the intact cells, which suggests a structural continuum linking the nuclear matrix, the intermediate filament network, and the intercellular desmosomal junctions. Most importantly, the protein composition of each of the four fractions obtained by this sequential procedure was essentially unique. Thus, the proteins constituting the soluble fraction, the cytoskeleton, the chromatin fraction, and the underlying nuclear matrix-intermediate filament scaffold are biochemically distinct.


Parasitology ◽  
1934 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evan Davies

The genus Petasiger which belongs to the family Echinostomidae was proposed by Dietz in 1909, with Petasiger exaeretus as the type species. The description given by Dietz of this species is incomplete and it is proposed therefore to present below a more detailed account of the anatomy, based on an examination of whole mounts and serial sections. The material was obtained from the small intestine of cormorants shot on the coast of Cardigan Bay between Aberystwyth and Llanrhystyd. Five cormorants were shot in July, and of these two contained a large number of Petasiger exaeretus in the small intestine.


1973 ◽  
Vol 19 (6) ◽  
pp. 753-756
Author(s):  
Terrence M. Hammill ◽  
Geno J. Germano

Glutaraldehyde-fixed, platinum-carbon-shadowed whole mounts, and ultrathin sections of glutaraldehyde-OsO4-fixed cells of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans were observed by electron microscopy. The preparations demonstrated a typical Vibrio form with a single polar flagellum. The cell envelope and the formation of external blebs were shown to be similar to other gram-negative bacteria. The protoplast, apparently devoid of mesosomes or other membranous structures, was densely packed with ribosomes and contained a fibrous nucleoid. A specialized region near the flagellar end of the cell was commonly observed and termed the basal apparatus. Cell division appeared to be by constriction.


1941 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 241-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. J. Folley ◽  
Helen M. Scott Watson ◽  
A. C. Bottomley

1. Observations on five animals indicate that the teats of immature castrated male goats grow isometrically. Less extensive data on three animals allow of the tentative conclusion that the same is true of immature normal males. In the male goat therefore teat growth appears to be uninfluenced by the testes.2. Administration of diethylstilboestrol or its dipropionate to normal or castrated immature male goats causes the teats to grow allometrically for a time.3. No externally visible udder growth occurred even when oestrogen treatment was prolonged for periods of over a year and was supplemented by progesterone or ethinyltestosterone. Whole mounts of glands from treated animals indicated that some mammary growth had occurred. In two cases microscopic examination showed the presence of alveoli. No explanation can be offered of the failure to develop the udder in the male goat experimentally.4. Endocrine activity of the ovary as evidenced by a change from isometric to allometric teat growth often manifests itself in the young female goat at an early age. In one case allometric teat growth was in progress at 41 days of age. During the allometric phase the data agree with the simple allometric law.5. During the rutting season following its birth, teat growth ceases completely in the female goat; allometric growth is resumed when the rutting season ends. It therefore appears that the corpus luteum inhibits teat growth.6. Administration of diethylstilboestrol or its dipropionate (by inunction of the udder region) causes, in the virgin female, an increase in the rate of teat growth accompanied by udder growth.


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