Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Selective Staining of Endocrine Cells by Basic Dyes After Acid Hydrolysis

220

Citations

6

References

1968

Year

Abstract

Staining of tissue sections by basic dyes after immersion in hot hydrochloric acid (0.2 N for 3–10 hr at 60 C) provides a means for selective detection of many endocrine cells. The acid hydrolysis suppresses diffuse basophilia, mainly due to RNA, DNA and acid polysaccharides, and increases the basophilia of secretory granules in endocrine cells, due, at least in part, to the proteins they store. After such treatment, toluidine blue or azur A (0.01–0.005% in 0.02 M McIlvaine buffer, pH 5) or pseudoisocyanin (0.02% in distilled water) heavily stain A and D cells of pancreatic islets, enterochromaffin and nonenterochromaffin endocrine cells of the gastrointestinal mucosa, thyroid parafollicular or C cells, pituitary basophil cells and adrenalin-secreting cells of the adrenal medulla.

References

YearCitations

Page 1