Abstract

Fluorescence spectroscopy and electron microscopic techniques have been employed to investigate a class of glial cells that is characterized by the presence in their cytoplasm of large fluorescing inclusions that stain with paraldehyde-fuchsin or chrome-hematoxyline-alum. In the periventricular nucleus the cells have been identified as a population of astrocytes whose inclusions emit an orange-red fluorescence. In the arcuate nucleus there are, in addition to an overwhelming majority of such astrocytes, also some microglial cells with similar characteristics. The ability of the latter to emit any kind of fluorescence has not yet been established. The fluorescence maximum of these astrocytic inclusions was found to be at 640 nm when excited at 405 nm. The data obtained suggest that the fluorescence observed is due to the presence of porphyrins in the astrocytic inclusions. In the majority of our electron microscopic pictures the inclusions lack a bounding membrane. By contrast, neuronal lipofuscin has an outer membrane. In cryostat sections, the lipofuscin emits a yellow fluorescence when excited at 400-410 nm.

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