Abstract

Osmiophilic reagents were used to study the histochemical localization of acid phosphatase and non-specific esterase in the keratinized oral mucosa of rat. The reaction product from both enzymes was found in the epithelium and in cells of the corium as discrete granules, suggestive of a lysosomal localization. Treatment with E-600 before incubation for non-specific esterase did not change this localization. The osmium black end-product, due to acid phosphatase activity, was examined with the electron microscope and compared with the localization obtained by the Gomori lead phosphate technique. Both methods produced a reaction product in membrane-bounded bodies resembling lysosomes, as described in other tissues. These organelles were present in the basal prickle and granular cell layers of the epithelium. In the keratinized layer the reaction product was localized between the cell membranes of the deeper cells and no deposits were present in the cells. It is suggested that the osmiophilic reagents provide a good alternative to the Gomori method for the localization of lysosomal acid phosphatase at both the light and electron microscope levels.

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