Abstract
An electron microscopic analysis with specific histochemical stainings for acidic glycoconjugates was carried out to examine the endothelium lining blood vessels of the rat spleen. Histochemical staining performed was the postembedding high or low iron diaminethiocarbohydrazide-silver protein-physical development (HID or LID-TCH-SP-PD) method, with or without prior digestion with acidic glycoconjugate-degrading enzymes, such as heparitinase, testicular hyaluronidase, chondroitinase B and neuraminidase. The results indicated that the acidic glycoconjugates in the basal lamina of the endothelial cells lining the four types of blood vessel (central arteries, arterial capillaries, splenic sinuses and pulp veins) were heparan sulfate, chondroitin sulfate A and/or C, chondroitin sulfate B and sialic acid residues. In the endothelial cells lining the central arteries, arterial capillaries and pulp veins, the surface coat of the luminal plasma membrane included heparan sulfate, chondroitin sulfate A and/or C, chondroitin sulfate B and sialic acid residues, whereas the corresponding ultrastructure of the splenic sinuses was devoid of detectable amounts of acidic glycoconjugates. This suggests that such characteristic histochemical features of the endothelium in the four types of the splenic blood vessel can be related to the possible physiological functions of the spleen.
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