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Mast cells [View Printable]
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NathalieHV
Group: Member Posts: 12 Joined: Oct 11, 2004
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Does anybody know a simple staining for mast cells (on paraffin section)? Nathalie HV
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| Posted Oct 13, 2004, 14:43 PM |
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frasermoss
Group: Admin Posts: 721 Joined: Feb 22, 2005
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I found the following at :
http://www.histosearch.com/histonet/Feb03A/MastcellstainingWasuntitl.html
If you need a stain for mast cells (including young ones) it may not be necessary to use immunohistochemistry, and you could save your lab some money by using a dye instead.
For 100 years or so after the first recognition of mast cells by the great Paul Ehrlich, they were defined as connective tissue cells with cytoplasmic granules that stained metachromatically with cationic dyes. From about the 1950s that translated to granules made of heparin (or of a similar highly sulphated polysaccharide). It's the heparin that causes the metachromasia (staining red with a normally blue dye) and also the affinity for cationic dyes at pH 1 or lower.
Mast cells stand out prominently in sections stained with toluidine blue at about pH 4. The background of blue nuclei is generally helpful. For a selective stain, alcian blue at pH 1 shows only mast cells, cartilage matrix and some types of mucus. The mast cells are easy to see and count with alcian blue, but the individual granules don't show as sharply as they do with toluidine blue. You can counterstain after alcian blue with Mayer's brazalum (that's Mayer's haemalum, but made with brazilin instead of haematoxylin), which colours the nuclei of cells red.
A long time ago I used alcian blue and Mayer's brazalum in an autoradiographic study of the life spans of mast cells labelled with 3[H]thymidine in baby rats (Journal of Anatomy 128:225-238, 1979). When the cells first arrive in the connective tissues they do not contain stainable heparin (Journal of Anatomy 118:517-529, 1974; there is also plenty of more recent literature that establishes haemopoietic tissue as the source of mast cell precursors).
If you need to stain mast cells that are so young that they don't yet contain heparin granules, the preceding paragraphs won't help you.
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......................... "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work". Edison
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| Posted Dec 20, 2006, 19:21 PM |
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frasermoss
Group: Admin Posts: 721 Joined: Feb 22, 2005
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......................... "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work". Edison
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| Posted Dec 20, 2006, 19:22 PM |
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frasermoss
Group: Admin Posts: 721 Joined: Feb 22, 2005
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Fluorescence of mast cell granules in paraffin sections and cell smears induced by an N-quaternary oxazole scintillator
The Histochemical Journal
ISSN 0018-2214 (Print) 1573-6865 (Online)
Issue Volume 27, Number 4 / April, 1995
Pages 318-322
http://www.springerlink.com/content/ln4975211v8t0n2w/
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......................... "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work". Edison
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| Posted Dec 20, 2006, 19:25 PM |
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