Abstract

The usefulness of imidazole-buffered osmium tetroxide as a stain for lipids in transmission electron microscopy has been investigated. Rat liver and other tissues were fixed by perfusion with glutaraldehyde and post-fixed with osmium-imidazole and the appearance of lipid droplets was compared with that after post-fixation in unbuffered aqueous osmium tetroxide or an osmium solution buffered otherwise. Prominent electron-opaque staining of lipid droplets and of lipoprotein particles was noted after post-fixation with 2% osmium-imidazole, pH 7.5, for 30 min. The lipid droplets appeared well circumscribed with no evidence of diffusion. In contrast, the intensity of staining was much less and there was some diffusion around lipid droplets in material post-fixed in aqueous or cacodylate-buffered osmium tetroxide. Spot tests on filter paper revealed that unsaturated fatty acids, especially linolenic and linoleic acids reacted more intensely with osmium-imidazole than with aqueous osmium tetroxide. These findings demonstrate that osmium-imidazole provides an excellent stain for lipids in transmission electron microscopy and that most probably it stains lipids with unsaturated fatty acids.

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