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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 198 (1998), S. 435-438 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Key words Microscopy ; Digital film scanner ; Image processing ; Bright field ; Multimedia ; Medical education
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Low-power bright field photomicrographs often suffer from insufficient sharpness, uneven illumination, and colour hues. Using a film scanner, commercially available and designed for digitizing 35-mm transparencies, we directly scanned microscopic slides that carried dye-labelled and stained sections. The digital images covered a field of up to 24×36 mm and revealed excellent sharpness, absolutely even illumination and superior colour reproduction as compared to conventional photomicrographs taken with binoculars, macro lenses, or microscopes. As the method requires neither specialized instrumentation nor expert knowledge of photomicrographic techniques, it reduces costs and saves time. The high-quality digital survey micrographs can easily be used for image processing, image analysis and morphometry. Thus, this new method is valuable not only for pathology, embryology, histochemistry, and the neurosciences, but also for the exchange of low-power micrographs via the internet and for computer media that are increasingly used in medical education.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-119X
    Keywords: Brush cell Lectin Glycocalyx Receptor Rat Guinea-pig Mouse
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract. Brush cells are specialised epithelial cells that are assumed to represent chemoreceptors of the digestive tract. They comprise a small population of the epithelial cells lining the intestine, possess a unique ultrastructure and, in many aspects, resemble the receptor cells of taste buds. To characterise glycoconjugates possibly involved in a sensory function, we investigated brush cells in the small intestine of three species using lectin histochemistry in confocal light and thin-section electron microscopy. Brush cells of rats were selectively labelled by the sialic acid-specific lectin Maackia amurensis agglutinin, those of guinea-pigs by the d-galactose-specific lectin Bandeiraea simplicifolia agglutinin, isolectin B4 and those of mice by the l-fucose-specific lectin Ulex europaeus agglutinin lectin I. Lectin binding sites were consistently located in the glycocalyx of the apical membrane and in that of cytoplasmic vesicles. In vivo lectin labelling revealed that the glycoconjugates of the apical membrane are accessible under physiological conditions, that brush cells do not endocytose and that they probably possess a high membrane turnover rate. The results show that specialisations exist in the composition of glycoconjugates forming the glycocalyx of brush cells in all species investigated. The presence of brush cell-specific glycoconjugates would be in accordance with the current hypothesis of a receptive function of brush cells. Differences in the specific glycosylation patterns among rats, guinea-pigs and mice indicate that species-specific adaptations exist.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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