Abstract
Thirteen dyes of the azo (benzopurpurin, Congo red, trypan blue, chromotrope 2R, orange G), indigoid (indigocarmine), triphenylmethane (acid fuchsin, aniline blue, light green, methyl blue), and xanthene (eosin B, eosin Y, erythrosin B) groups were applied under standard conditions to a variety of human, rabbit, rat, mouse and frog tissues in paraffin sections. Sections were examined for color changes which might indicate metachromatic reactions analogous to the metachromasy of cationic dyes. Disazo and xanthene dyes showed shifts in hue, with some qualification on the shifts of xanthenes. Metachromatic shifts of anionic dyes were generally of low order compared to those of cationic dyes. Nuclei, erythrocytes, inner elastic laminae of arteries, keratinous structures, and certain areas in the ground substance of connective tissue most often elicited metachromasy. It is suggested that basic proteins are responsible for the metachromatic reactions. Equally interesting areas were those staining poorly (cartilage matrix, most types of mucus), since these are sites of highly acidic substances capable of binding proteins.

This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit: