The coating of mouse myocardial cells. A cytochemical electron microscopical study.
- 1 October 1975
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry
- Vol. 23 (10) , 727-744
- https://doi.org/10.1177/23.10.1194663
Abstract
The coating of mouse myocardial cells has been investigated with a variety of cytochemical methods. The coating of the surface membrane gives a positive reaction with ruthenium red, colloidal thorium, phosphotungstic acid (PTA) at low pH, silver methenamine after periodic oxidation (PA-silver technique) and with silver proteinate after periodic oxidation and thiocarbohydrazide treatment (PA-TCH-silver technique). The coating of the T system gives almost similar results. The nexuses do not react with PTA nor with the PA-silver and PA-TCH-silver techniques, but they are strongly stained with ruthenium red which reveals periodic structures in their gaps. The specificities of the colloidal thorium technique and PAT staining have been tested by chemical treatments (methylation, acetylation, saponification), enzymatic digestions (pronase, trypsin, hyaluronidase, neuraminidase) and carbohydrate extractions (with 0.1 N NaOH and 0.05 M H2SO4). These cytochemical data indicate, considering the specificity of the reactions, that the coating of the membrane surface and the T system contains polyanionic groups. A part of them, at least, would belong to a carbohydrate-containing material (glycoproteins), whereas at the level of nexuses the sugar residues would probably be absent.Keywords
This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: