Abstract
Thin section and freeze-fracture techniques have been used to examine the morphology of cell junctions in a variety of pleuro-pulmonary tumours with the aim of identifying features that may be of diagnostic importance or of significance in the development of the tumour. Freeze-fracture preparations are particularly useful for the analysis of cell junctions, since extensive face views of the interior of the cell membrane are exposed. This enables precise characterisation of the type of junctions present, their extent and their inter-relationships.Freeze-fracture replicas can reveal the presence of junctions that would be difficult or impossible to detect in thin sections. For example, desmosomes are a well-known feature in thin sections of squamous cell carcinomas, but these tumours may also have focal tight junctions and gap junctions (Figs. 1,2). The tight and gap junctions can occur separately (Fig.l), or in combination (Fig. 2). Similarly, in a recent study of a case of “Ewing’s sarcoma”, replicas showed the presence of unusual, elaborate focal tight junctions, a feature never suspected from the routine thin section studies of this tumour.
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More From: Proceedings, annual meeting, Electron Microscopy Society of America
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