ISSN:
1432-0878
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
,
Medicine
Notes:
Summary Air dried peritoneal fluid and tissue spreads from rat, mouse, hamster, rabbit, guinea pig, cat, chicken, and frog were treated with paraformaldehyde (pCHO) at 80 ° C for 1 hr. Only rat and mouse mast cells fluoresced. In the rat, mast cells fluoresced whether present in vascular or avascular areas of mesentery, in fat depots, or in peritoneal fluid. Photographs were obtained by fluorescence microscopy, the preparations were then stained and the same fields rephotographed in white light. Comparison of the photographs showed that every fluorescent rat mesentery mast cell also stained with acidified toluidine blue and with Astrablau; a few fluorescent cells did not stain with toluidine blue and an occasional cell that did not fluoresce stained with this dye or with Astrablau. Paraformaldehyde depressed somewhat toluidine blue, inhibited strongly Astrablau, and abolished Alcian blue binding. It had no effect on the staining of purified heparin in model experiments. Reserpine administration in the rat did not prevent visualization of mast cells by the pCHO method. These experiments indicate that all rat mast cells contain serotonin, regardless of cell size (age ?) or site and suggest that no massive, cyclic release of this amine occurs either physiologically or in response to reserpine treatment.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00407155
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