scholarly journals LOCALISATION MITOCHONDRIALE D'ENZYMES LIEES AU METABOLISME DU GLYCOGENE DANS LE SPERMATOZOIDE DE L'ESCARGOT

1970 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 20-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Personne ◽  
Winston Anderson

The mitochondrial derivative of the sperm cell of the Gastropod Helix is endowed with a compartment loaded with glycogen (Personne et André, 1964). The aim of this work is to establish whether this mitochondrial glycogen is synthesized in the mitochondrial derivative itself or elsewhere in the cell. For this purpose, living sperm were first incubated in a medium containing glucose 1-phosphate, then fixed, sectioned, and stained specifically for polysaccharides by the phosphotungstic acid technique or the periodic acid-thiosemicarbazide-silver proteinate technique. Comparison with controls shows that a synthesis of glycogen occurred during the time of incubation. It can be inferred from this result that an amylophosphorylase system controlling the metabolism of polysaccharides is present in the mitochondrial derivative itself. Results obtained with the iodine technique indicate that the original glycogen molecules are elongated during the experiment. It seems probable that the amylophosphorylase system demonstrated here accounts for at least a part of the proteinaceous coat morphologically detectable around each individual glycogen particle.

1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 500-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Baumgärtner ◽  
P. V. Peixoto

Morphological features and immunoreactivity for cytokeratin (CK), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and neuron-specific enolase (NSE) of three canine neuroepitheliomas and three canine ependymomas were investigated. Neuroepitheliomas were in three German shepherds as intradural-extramedullary solitary masses, with spinal cord displacement between T10 and L2. Histologically, they contained tubules and acini, lined by epithelial cells with focal squamous metaplasia, rosette-like structures, and polygonal to spindle-shaped cells between tubules. Acini were empty or filled with a homogeneous, eosinophilic periodic acid-Schiff (PAS)-positive material. Mitotic indices varied from low to moderate. Ependymomas occurred in the third (two cases) and fourth ventricle in adult boxers. Histologically, they were composed of cells with an ill-defined, scant amphophilic cytoplasm, with a central round euchromatic nucleus; cells formed pseudorosettes, with a central fibro-vascular stroma. Neuroepitheliomas stained for CK, but ependymomas did not. Both failed to stain for GFAP, NSE, or phosphotungstic acid hematoxylin (PTAH). Thus, antibodies to cytokeratin are useful to distinguish neuroepitheliomas from ependymomas.


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (5) ◽  
pp. 974-988 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A. Hopkin ◽  
J. Reid

M-haustoria of the endocyclic rust Endocronartium harknessii (J. P. Moore) Y. Hirat. were examined with light and transmission electron microscopy in infected seedlings of Pinus banksiana Lamb. The haustoria developed from unspecialized cells of the intercellular hyphae, each of which appeared capable of producing several haustoria. The haustoria were distinct from the intercellular hyphae in possessing a narrow septate neck region which terminated in a globose haustorial body. Periodic acid – thiocarbohydrazide – silver proteinate and periodic acid – chromic acid – phosphotungstic acid staining provided evidence of an additional wall layer in the haustorial neck not evident in the intercellular hyphae and suggested that the extra-haustorial matrix contained polysaccharides of mixed linkage as well as lipids. However, cellulase extraction and the use of gold-bound wheat-germ lectin showed that neither cellulose nor chitin, respectively, was a component of the matrix. Both the haustoria and the matrix were separated from the host cytoplasm by the extrahaustorial membrane. This membrane stained positively with periodic acid – chromic acid – phosphotungstic acid, while the noninvaginated portion of the host plasmalemma with which it was continuous usually did not. The matrix fluoresced strongly when stained with aniline blue in an apparently compatible reaction. Other stains such as analinonapthalenesulphonic acid and Calcofluor white showed evidence of protein and polysaccharide in the fungal walls. Light and transmission electron microscope observations showed that penetration pegs formed as narrow tubular evaginations of the haustorial mother cell which caused inward displacement of the host cell wall. They retained their peg-like appearance as they entered the cell lumen, but eventually their distal ends enlarged to form typical globose haustorial bodies.


2019 ◽  
Vol 152 (5) ◽  
pp. 563-569
Author(s):  
Alessia Buglioni ◽  
Tsung-Teh Wu ◽  
Taofic Mounajjed

Abstract Objectives To examine the immunohistochemical and ultrastructural features of hepatocellular cytoplasmic globules in venous outflow impairment (VOI). Methods Sixty-four liver core biopsies were screened. Patients with α-1 antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency were excluded. All biopsies were stained with H&E, Masson trichrome, periodic acid-Schiff with diastase digestion (PAS-D), phosphotungstic acid hematoxylin (PTAH), complement protein 4d (C4d) immunostain, and AAT immunostain. Electron microscopy was also performed. Results Hepatocellular globules were identified in 8% of in-house cases. Causes of VOI included heart failure and Budd-Chiari syndrome. The hepatocellular cytoplasmic globules showed size variability, random distribution, and positivity for PAS-D, PTAH, and AAT. C4d was inconsistently positive. Electron microscopy showed that the globules were lysosome-bound inclusions containing microfibrillar material and fibrinogen. Conclusions PAS-D–positive hepatocellular globules occur in VOI. They cross-react with AAT but have different appearance, localization, and ultrastructural composition from globules in AAT deficiency.


1973 ◽  
Vol 21 (8) ◽  
pp. 703-714 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. I. ZACKS ◽  
M. F. SHEFF ◽  
A. SAITO

A variety of cytochemical methods were used to investigate the composition of mouse sarcolemma. We found that the sarcolemma is a complex composed of the myofiber cell membrane, a thin zone external to the cell membrane that contains groups that bind colloidal iron and thorium at low pH and a thicker amorphous layer that fails to stain with colloidal iron and thorium at low pH. The entire complex is periodic acid-Schiff-positive and stains with ruthenium red and strongly acid solutions of phosphotungstic acid. Although the specificity of these cytochemical stains is controversial, data obtained with them and from preliminary analyses of myofiber external lamina (EL) indicate that the myofiber cell coat is chiefly composed of glycoprotein containing a large number of carboxyl groups. The EL within the subneural apparatus of the neuromuscular junction differs from noninnervated areas in the fusion of Schwann cell and myofiber EL, the absence of collagen microfibrils, the more intense binding of divalent cations and the less intense stain with phosphotungstic acid in strongly acid solutions.


1970 ◽  
Vol 18 (11) ◽  
pp. 783-793 ◽  
Author(s):  
WINSTON A. ANDERSON ◽  
PAUL PERSONNE

In this electron microscopic cytochemical study, the periodic acid-thiosemicarbazide-silver proteinate procedure was used to demonstrate glycogen stores within the mitochondrial derivative of sperm of pulmonate gastropods. In the presence of phenazine methosulfate and tetrazolium salt, enzymatic activity for glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase and lactate dehydrogenase is shown in the matrix and in the compartment containing glycogen, but in the absence of phenazine methosulfate, tetrazolium reductase activity in the matrix is emphasized. Activity for NADH2-tetrazolium reductase and succinate dehydrogenase is also demonstrated in the matrix. Using 3,3'-diaminobenzidine tetra-HCl, cytochrome c oxidase activity is shown in the paracrystalline mitochondrial structure. The interrelation between glycolytic and oxidative pathways in this highly compartmentalized mitochondrion is considered.


1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (7) ◽  
pp. 1831-1850 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael D. Coffey ◽  
Frances H. E. Allen

Histological differences were evident in the leaves of eight near-isogenic lines of flax infected with the rust fungus Melampsora lini. Compared with the compatible L9 and M1 interactions, fungal growth was progressively more restricted in the moderately incompatible K and M4, incompatible M and P, and highly incompatible L and M3 interactions. This restriction took place in advance of appreciable necrosis of host cells in K, M4, M, and P. At 72 h the proportion of haustoria-containing cells which were necrotic was only 10–15% in K and M4. In M at 72 h necrosis was 80% or more at infection sites with small colonies but was negligible at sites with large colonies. In P, by contrast, a similar proportion of necrosis, 40% at 72 h, was present at all infection sites. However, in L and M3 host necrosis was much more rapid and the fungus was restricted to a few host cells. An early ultrastructural event was the appearance of extensive fibrillar deposits in the initially electron-lucent extrahaustorial matrices of both the incompatible M and P and moderately incompatible M4 and K interactions. A positive reaction with silver proteinate indicated that these matrical deposits contained carbohydrate, possibly a mucopolysaccharide or glycoprotein, but they were not extracted by either cellulase, pectinase, or chitinase. The extrahaustorial membrane, surrounding the haustoria in the compatible L9 and M1 interactions and the moderately incompatible K interaction was not stained by the periodic acid – phosphotungstic acid – chromic acid (PACP) procedure believed specific for the plasmalemma. In incompatible reactions clusters of electron-dense particles sometimes replaced starch in plastids of infected host cells. This event usually coincided with the appearance of extensive matrical deposits around fungal haustoria. At the same time particles were also found in plastids in uninfected host cells immediately adjacent to infection sites, particularly in the M and P interactions. These particles were extracted from thin sections by using pullulanase followed by α-amylase, indicating that they consisted of highly branched amylopectin.


1986 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 287-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Honor ◽  
D. B. De Nicola ◽  
J. J. Turek ◽  
J. A. Render ◽  
D. A. Serra

A neoplasm involving the ileo-cecal-colic junction, thymus, and tracheobronchial lymph nodes of a 7-year-old domestic cat was composed of dense sheets of round to oval mononuclear cells with oval to indented nuclei, moderate amounts of cytoplasm, and variable numbers of round eosinophilic granules. These granules are brown to black in phosphotungstic acid hematoxylin-stained sections and stain variably with the periodic acid-Schiff stain. They are 0.8 to 1.5 μm in diameter, limited by a single unit membrane, and have variable electron density. Light microscopic cellular morphology and staining characteristics as well as ultrastructural features of these cells are consistent with feline globule leukocytes. Morphologic features of the neoplastic cells in the present case are similar to those of the only other reported neoplasm of globule leukocytes which also involved the intestine of a cat.


1980 ◽  
Vol 26 (9) ◽  
pp. 1132-1140 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. W. Hill ◽  
J. T. Mullins

Growing apices of Achlya ambisexttalis Raper hyphae were examined by electron microscopy using cytochemical techniques. Apical vesicles can be grouped into two major classes based upon size and cytochemical reactions. Vesicles of the most prominent class are about 150 nm in diameter and possess contents which appear fibrous in thin section. This fibrous material reacts positively with the periodic acid – silver methenamine (PASM) cytochemical test for polysaccharides. Most of these same vesicles also display IDPase activity, and a smaller number display acid phosphatase activity. Vesicles of the second class are about 80 nm in diameter, and include coated vesicles and others which react positively for IDPase activity. They show a negative PASM reaction in contrast with the larger vesicles. Some of these smaller vesicles are stained by the phosphotungstic acid – chromic acid (PTA–CrO3) stain, whereas 150-nm vesicles are not. The source of at least some vesicles of both major classes appears to be the Golgi apparatus. It is proposed that the IDPase activity and carbohydrate content of the 150-nm cytoplasmic vesicles could serve as useful markers in their isolation.


1969 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 575-603 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan G. Langreth

Spermiogenesis in Cancer crabs was studied by light and electron microscopy. The sperm are aflagellate, and when mature consist primarily of a spherical acrosome surrounded by the nucleus with its short radiating arms. The acrosome forms by a coalescence of periodic acid-Schiff-positive (PAS-positive) vesicles. During spermiogenesis one edge of the acrosomal vesicle invaginates to form a PAS-negative central core. The inner region of the acrosome bounding the core contains basic proteins which are not complexed to nucleic acid. The formation of an elaborate lattice-like complex of fused membranes, principally from membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum, is described. These membranes are later taken into the nucleus and subsequently degenerate. In late spermatids, when most of the cytoplasm is sloughed, the nuclear envelope and the cell membrane apparently fuse to become the limiting boundary over most of the sperm cell. In the mature sperm the chromatin of the nucleus and arms, which is Feulgen-positive, contains no detectable protein. The chromatin filaments appear clumped, branched, and anastomosed; morphologically, they resemble the DNA of bacterial nuclei. Mitochondria are absent or degenerate in mature sperm of Cancer crabs, but the centrioles persist in the nucleoplasm at the base of the acrosome.


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