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Ultrastructural cytochemistry of biogenic amines in nervous tissue: methodologic improvements.
Author(s) -
J. P. Tranzer,
John Richards
Publication year - 1976
Publication title -
journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.971
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1551-5044
pISSN - 0022-1554
DOI - 10.1177/24.11.63507
Subject(s) - osmium tetroxide , endoplasmic reticulum , fixation (population genetics) , vesicle , nervous tissue , chemistry , free nerve ending , cytochemistry , potassium dichromate , reticulum , biophysics , ultrastructure , anatomy , biology , biochemistry , electron microscope , inorganic chemistry , neuroscience , membrane , physics , optics , gene
A new fixation method has been developed for localizing biogenic amines in nervous tissue. The method is a modification of the chromaffin reaction in which all fixation steps are buffered with mixtures of sodium chromate and potassium dichromate. In this way the fixation and cytochemical reaction are carried out almost simultaneously. Using the rat vas deferens as a model tissue, it was found that the preservation of electron dense (chromaffin) cores in the vesicles of adrenergic nerve terminals depended on several factors: a short primary fixation using low concentrations of aldehydes, the presence of the chromate/dichromate buffer during all fixation steps and, finally, a long incubation period in a slightly acidic (pH 6.0) solution of this buffer before postfixation in osmium tetroxide. Using this method it was possible to identify not only small and large dense-cored vesicles as storage sites for amines but also a tubular reticulum (neuronal endoplasmic reticulum), the latter especially in nerve terminals of mesenteric arteries and iris. Biogenic amines were also visualized in sympathetic ganglion cells and in the central nervous system e.g., supraependymal nerve terminals, tissues that up to now proved the most difficult in terms of amine localization. In all the tissues examined the cytochemical reaction was highly selective and present in well preserved tissue, which is a significant advance over previously available techniques. It therefore offers new opportunities for further studies on the role of biogenic amines as neurotransmitters.

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