Abstract

AbstractThere is a need for an electron microscopic method for visualization of selectively stained neurons and neuronal processes with higher resolution than can be obtained with the light microscope, but using thick sections that allow visualization of the three‐dimensional structure of the neuron. Such a method is required for measurement of the geometry of neurons, and this information is needed to test theoretical predictions on the way in which electrical signals of synaptic origin are processed by the cells. The high voltage electron microscope (HVEM) is well suited to this application, because of its high resolution and ability to form images of thick sections. Use of this instrument requires development of selective stains that can produce diffuse cytoplasmic staining of specific cells or cell populations on the basis of their functional properties. Several such methods currently being employed for light microscopic work can be used directly in the high voltage electron microscope or can be made useful by relatively minor alterations. These include intracellular staining with horseradish peroxidase, axonal tracing with Phaseolus vulgaris leukoagglutinin (PHA‐L), and immunocytochemical staining for specific cell markers known to stain the cytoplasm of certain cell populations.Cells stained intracellularly by microinjection of horseradish peroxidase during physiological recording experiments may be stained in thick (ca. 50 μm) sections cut on a vibratome or similar instrument and stained in the standard way, using methods designed for light microscopy. The sections are then postfixed in osmium tetroxide and embedded in epoxy plastic. Sections cut from these blocks at thicknesses of from 1 to 5 μm using a dry glass knife may be examined directly in the HVEM with no further staining. This produces a very clear image of the cell on a relatively unstained background. This method provides more than adequate resolution of the boundary of the neuron, allowing measurement of neuronal processes to better than 10‐nm precision.Similar results are obtained when the same method is applied to axonal tracing using PHA‐L. In this case, the exogenously applied marker is used to label a small population of nearby neurons and to trace their connections with other cells at a distance. The lectin is detected by immunocytochemistry, but the selective contrast of the image is adjustable because the concentration of antigen in the cell is largely controlled by the experimenter. The lectin is distributed diffusely in the cytoplasm in a pattern identical to that of intracellular staining, so like intracellular staining, it reveals the overall shape of the cell.Immunocytochemical labelling using endogenous antigens known to be distributed in the cytoplasm of specific neurons produced inadequate control of selective contrast when prepared in this manner. Instead, 1–10μm sections cut from blocks of nervous tissue were embedded in polyethylene glycol, stained using a combedded in polyethylene glycol, stained using a combination of immunocytochemistry and histochemical intensification methods, and embedded in plastic on the grid. This method, which is also suited for staining with poorly penetrating markers such as colloidal gold, may also prove useful in a variety of other situations requiring the intensification of selective contrast.

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