Publication | Closed Access
A comparison of membrane fracture faces of fixed and unfixed glycerinated tissue
19
Citations
11
References
1976
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringCytoskeletonBiomedical EngineeringCellular PhysiologyOrthopaedic SurgeryFlap PhysiologySoft Tissue InjuryMembrane FractureSoft Tissue SurgeryChemical PrefixationMembrane TransportTissue InjuryBiochemistryCell BiologyUltrastructureGap JunctionsPhysiologyWound HealingTight JunctionsSoft Tissue ReconstructionMedicinePlastic SurgeryExtracellular Matrix
Fixed (glutaraldehyde, 3%) and unfixed specimens of rat buccal epithelium, striated muscle, and liver, were cryoprotected with glycerol, freeze-fractured, and replicated without sublimation. A comparison of fracture faces of general plasma membranes, nuclear membranes, mitochondrial membranes, and membranes of rough endoplasmic reticulum revealed no significant differences as between fixed and unfixed material. Apart from some membranes of liver endoplasmic reticulum, there was no evidence of aggregation or redistribution of intramembranous particles in the unfixed material. The results demonstrate that chemical prefixation of tissues for freeze-fracture is not always necessary, or even desirable, and that glycerol may not be as deeply or directly implicated in particle aggregation as previously thought. Fixation with glutaraldehyde alters the cleaving behaviour of plasma membrane at desmosomes and tight junctions, but not at gap junctions.
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