Here, we provide an easy, low-cost, and time-efficient protocol to chemically fix primate brain tissue with acrolein fixative, allowing for long-term preservation that is compatible with pre-embedding immunohistochemistry for transmission electron microscopy.
Despite all the technological advances at the light microscopy level, electron microscopy remains the only tool in neuroscience to examine and characterize ultrastructural and morphological details of neurons, such as synaptic contacts. Good preservation of brain tissue for electron microscopy can be obtained by rigorous cryo-fixation methods, but these techniques are rather costly and limit the use of immunolabeling, which is crucial to understand the connectivity of identified neuronal systems. Freeze-substitution methods have been developed to allow the combination of cryo-fixation with immunolabeling. However, the reproducibility of these methodological approaches usually relies on costly freezing devices. Moreover, achieving reliable results with this technique is very time-consuming and skill-challenging. Hence, the traditional chemically fixed brain, particularly with acrolein fixative, remains a time-efficient and low-cost method to combine electron microscopy with immunohistochemistry. Here, we provide a reliable experimental protocol using chemical acrolein fixation that leads to the preservation of primate brain tissue and is compatible with pre-embedding immunohistochemistry and transmission electron microscopic examination.
Light microscopy, including confocal and two-photon microscopy, has proven to be an efficient tool for studying in vivo neuronal processes, among other things1,2. Although the typical spatial resolution at the Light Microscopic (LM) level is approximately 200 nm, recent technological advances using different light sources, such as extreme ultraviolet and soft X-ray microscopy, have notably increased this resolution to a nearly 10 nm spatial resolution3,4,5. Other technological advances in imaging include combined magnetic resonance imaging with histology and provide a novel method for measuring the thickness of the myelin sheath in vivo, a parameter that was traditionally measurable only at the Electron Microscopic (EM) level6,7. Although these advances at the LM level provide an excellent tool for studying living processes, a detailed view and characterization of structures, such as synaptic contacts, can only be achieved with EM, which offers a resolution that can reach 0.5 nm. However, observation at the EM level requires the specimens to be dead and altered in some ways, with chemical fixatives and dehydration processes, in order to preserve the cytoarchitecture. Thus, examining biological samples at high resolution can be challenging due to radiation damage from the electron beam, low contrast, structural deviations of membranes, or even the presence of artifacts that can occur following dehydration and epoxy embedding8,9,10.
Preserving specimens in their native form for structural analysis can be achieved by using "Cryo EM of Vitrified Sections" or CEMOVIS, a sectioning approach that involves rapidly freezing and embedding the sample in vitreous ice and examining the sections under the EM at a cryogenic temperature11,12. This procedure allows for the examination of samples while they are still solid and fully hydrated, thus eliminating artifacts caused by dehydration processes13. However, this method involves additional devices for cryo-ultramicrotomy, as well as additional devices on the standard EM, in order to allow this observation at very low temperatures, which generate significant additional costs. In addition, the CEMOVIS approach precludes the use of immunolabeling techniques, since antibodies usually have to be incubated at RT. Alternatively, it is possible to combine ultrastructural analysis with immunohistochemical procedures by using a freeze-substitution approach, during which cryo-fixed specimens are slowly thawed while immerged in cryo-protective chemicals and are then embedded in specialized resins, such as Lowicryls. Post-embedding immunolabeling can then be performed on such material12. However, freeze-substitution and cryo-fixation techniques are time consuming. They require the installation of additional equipment and still require samples to be exposed to organic solvent and chemical fixative that can alter the cytoarchitecture, despite the use of a low temperature14,15. Hence, despite all the technological advances both at the LM and EM level, chemical fixation of brain tissue, particularly with acrolein, remains a low-cost and time-efficient method to combine immunohistochemistry with EM16.
In the last decades, many attempts were made to find a mixture of aldehydes that provide the best tissue preservation. Before the 1960s, the only chemical fixative that gave acceptable results for EM was osmium tetroxide. However, osmium tetroxide is highly toxic and expensive, precluding its use through the vascular system to fix organs such as the brain. Acrolein was introduced in the late 1950s as a reliable method for animal tissue preservation suitable for EM observation of cellular structures17. It penetrates the tissue more deeply and reacts more quickly than other aldehydes when used for fixation by immersion and allows good preservation of cytoplasmic components, with minimal shrinkage of the tissue17. Such a feature gives acrolein fixation a clear advantage over other aldehydes when used in fresh tissue, by allowing a more accurate localization of living molecular compounds, such as enzymes and other proteins18. Indeed, it has been validated through the years as an easy, efficient and low-cost method of fixation for visualization at the EM level in many species, including amphibians and rodents, as it efficiently stabilizes peptides and proteins, retains antigenicity and provides relatively intact ultrastructure when used in combination with another aldehyde fixative16,18,19,20,21. Protocols for acrolein fixation in rodents have since then been standardized and used extensively, particularly by the Pickel group, to implement dual immunolabeling for EM16,22. A few groups have used acrolein fixation in non-human primate brain tissue23. However, to our knowledge, there is only one published protocol efficiently describing chemical fixation with acrolein in non-human primates that is compatible with EM immunolabeling24.
In this article, we provide an easy and reliable method to efficiently chemically fix non-human primate brains with acrolein, allowing for a potentially long-term preservation along with pre-embedding immunolabeling and transmission EM examination.
Ethics Statement: All protocols involving animals were approved by the Comité de Protection des Animaux de l'Université Laval and were made in accordance with the Canadian Council on Animal Care's Guide to the Care and Use of Experimental Animals (Ed. 2). The protocol described here was optimized for adult animals of approximately 800 g. The volumes of fixative should be adjusted according to the animal's size.
1. Preparation of Solutions for Transcardiac Perfusion
2. Transcardiac Perfusion and Brain Dissection
3. Pre-embedding Immunohistochemistry (Figure 1C)
4. Osmification and Embedding for Electron Microscopic Observation
5. Sample Preparation for Ultrathin Sectioning and Observation Using a Transmission Electron Microscope
In this section, we present representative results that were obtained following the observation, at the transmission EM level, of immunostained primate brain tissue chemically fixed with a mixture of 3% acrolein and 4% PFA. We achieved good preservation of the ultrastructure, as indicated by the relatively intact myelin sheath and the neat visualization of double membranes (Figure 2A). Synaptic contacts, along with neuronal elements from the microenvironment, can easily be identified (Figure 2B). Neuronal elements labeled with diaminobenzidine (DAB) immunoprecipitate are recognized at the EM level by their filled cytoplasm or axoplasm. The plasma membrane and the outer surface of organelles are also typically lined with the electron-dense precipitate (Figure 3).
In this particular experiment, we used antibodies against the serotonin transporter (SERT), choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), or Tyrosine Hydroxylase (TH) to visualize immunolabeled neuronal elements in the external (GPe) or internal (GPi) segment of the squirrel monkey globus pallidus (Figure 3). In order to do so, we used a combination of fixative chemicals that preserve antigenicity as well as ultrastructure, allowing a detailed morphological investigation. Although many antibodies can be used with the transcardiac perfusion protocol described above, we recommend that users perform optimization concentration tests beforehand, since some primary antibodies are known to not provide optimal immunolabeling with acrolein fixation. Alternatively, when antibodies do not provide optimal immunolabeling with acrolein fixation, a dilution of 0.1 – 2% glutaraldehyde in 4% PFA can be used for transcardiac perfusion. It provides tissue quality relatively equivalent to acrolein-fixed brain tissue with preserved antigenicity for many antibodies (Figure 4).
Finally, we provide typical examples of EM photomicrographs obtained following inappropriate manipulations. A poor fixation results in altered myelin sheaths (Figure 5A, B) and difficulties in visualization of the double membranes of neurites (Figure 5C, D), preventing a reliable identification and analysis of labeled and unlabeled neuronal elements. An excessive incubation time in the DAB solution creates excessive background and non-specific staining that can potentially generate false-positive results. Background or non-specific staining sometimes appears as incomplete staining of neuronal elements (Figure 6A, B), but more often as numerous and closely located stained neuronal elements (Figure 6C, D). The use of detergent in the blocking solution significantly alters the quality of the tissue. It may lead to missing organelles in labeled elements (Figure 7A) or degradation of myelin sheaths (Figure 7B) and cellular membranes (Figure 7C), rendering any acute interpretation of the microenvironment difficult. Finally, a misstep in the osmification process, such as using rinsing solution containing sodium chloride, produces unreliable results where the cellular structures are difficult to distinguish (Figure 7D).
Figure 1: Schematics of Essential Steps of the Protocol. The monkey brain (A) is cut into serial sections with a cooling vibratome (B). It is then processed for pre-embedding immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy, after which the region of interest is placed on the tip of a resin block (C) and cut into 80 nm thick sections with an ultramicrotome (D). Ultrathin sections are then collected on bare 150 mesh copper grids or formvar-coated nickel grids (E), stained with lead citrate and ready to be observed under transmission electron microscope (F). Scale bars: 1 mm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Well-preserved Primate Brain Tissue after Acrolein-PFA Transcardiac Perfusion. Electron micrographs of squirrel monkey (Saimiri sciureus) brain tissue of the GPi (A) and GPe (B) showing representative well-preserved material after performing the acrolein-PFA transcardiac perfusion and the immunoperoxidase-diaminobenzidine technique. The myelin sheath of axons (a) is relatively intact (see arrowhead in A), and the general ultrastructure is well preserved in A and B. Dendritic profiles (d), small unmyelinated axons (a), and axon varicosities (av) can easily be identified. An example of an axon varicosity establishing a symmetrical synaptic contact (between arrows) with a dendritic profile (d) is shown in B. Scale bar: 1 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Sections from Squirrel Monkey GPe and GPi Immunolabeled for Choline Acetyltransferase (ChAT), Serotonin Transporter (SERT), and Tyrosine Hydroxylase (TH) by using the Immunoperoxidase-diaminobenzidine Technique. Immunolabeled elements can easily be identified by their cytoplasm or axoplasm filled with electron-dense DAB precipitate. Labeled dendritic profiles are recognized by filled microfilaments, as seen in A, where a ChAT-immunostained dendrite in the GPi receives a synaptic contact (between arrows) from an unlabeled axon varicosity (av). The electron micrograph in B shows a myelinated axon in the GPe with a relatively intact myelin sheath whose axoplasm is immunolabeled for TH. The example in C shows an axon varicosity in the GPi immunolabeled for SERT and is seen to establish a symmetrical synaptic contact (between arrows) with a dendrite (d). In this example, the DAB precipitate lines the plasma membrane and the outer surface of organelles (mitochondrion and synaptic vesicles). The axon varicosity shown in D was observed in the GPe and immunolabeled for TH and represents an example of DAB precipitate entirely filling the axoplasm, with synaptic vesicles being visible but more difficult to delineate. Elements of the microenvironment can easily be identified, as exemplified by myelinated and unmyelinated axons (a) and occasional dendrites (d) surrounding the labeled axon varicosity. Electron micrographs are modified from 25,26,27. Scale bar: 1 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Examples of Primate Brain Tissue after Glutaraldehyde-PFA Transcardiac Perfusion. Representative electron micrographs of macaque monkey (Macaca fascicularis) brain tissue of the GPe (A) and GPi (B-D) after performing transcardiac perfusion with 0.2% glutaraldehyde mixed with 4% PFA and immunoperoxidase-diaminobenzidine technique with an antibody against the serotonin transporter (SERT). As in Figure 2, immunolabeled elements can be identified by their cytoplasm and axoplasm filled with electron-dense DAB precipitate. General ultrastructure is relatively intact and elements of the microenvironment can easily be identified, as shown by myelinated and unmyelinated axons (a) and occasional dendrites (d) and axon varicosities (av) surrounding the labeled axon varicosities, as described in Figure 2. However, note the inconsistency in the quality of ultrastructure, denoted by well-defined plasma membranes (arrowheads), but relatively damaged myelin sheath (arrow). Scale bar: 1 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: Examples of Primate Brain Tissue Obtained following an Unsuccessful Transcardiac Perfusion. Results from an unsuccessful chemical fixation are shown here in the squirrel monkey GPi (A - B) and GPe (C - D) transcardially perfused with 0.9% NaCl rinsing solution and a mixture of ice-cold 4% PFA and 15% picric acid diluted in 0.1 M PB (pH 7.4). Brains were post-fixed 1 h at 4 °C in 4% PFA and 30% sucrose and cut into 60 µm thick sagittal sections with a cooling vibratome. Inappropriately fixed brain tissue can be recognized by a damaged myelin sheath (A and B, arrowheads), as well as by blurry or undefined plasma membranes (C and D, see arrowheads for examples). Different neuronal elements are difficult to identify, rendering any interpretation of the ultrastructure unreliable. Scale bar: 1 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 6: Examples of Non-specific ChAT Immunolabeling in the Squirrel Monkey GPe. Background staining or non-specific immunolabeling sometimes appears under the EM as partial staining of large cellular elements, as illustrated in A - B (arrowheads). Such unspecific staining appears more often at the surface of immunostained sections. Other examples of non-specific immunolabeling include the frequent observation of very small elements evoking small, unmyelinated axons partially or completely filled with DAB and located very close to one another, as demonstrated by arrowheads in C and D. Scale bar: 1 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 7: Damaged Squirrel Monkey GPe Tissue after Missteps in Sample Preparation for Electron Microscopy. The use of detergent, such as Triton X-100, in the blocking solution, even at a low concentration of 0.02%, substantially alters the integrity of the ultrastructure by damaging the cytoplasm of dendrites (A) or the myelin sheath of axons (B). The different neuronal elements are also difficult to distinguish from one another (C), since the plasma membranes are damaged and difficult to delineate. The osmification process is also an important step in sample preparation. The use of sodium chloride in rinsing solutions (D) alters the fixation of the tissue, rendering subsequent analysis difficult. Scale bar: 800 nm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
In this article, we present a reliable protocol for transcardiac perfusion of non-human primates and pre-embedding immunohistochemistry suitable for EM sample examination. Although typical cryo-EM, such as CEMOVIS, provides a good preservation of brain ultrastructure, it also limits the use of immunohistochemistry12. Other techniques, including cryo-substitution and Tokuyaso technique, allow post-embedding immunohistochemistry, but these techniques are expensive due to additional devices needed during the process and can be time-consuming and skill-challenging12,14,15. Moreover, in order to efficiently use the cryo-fixation method, the sample has to be relatively small (up to 200 µm in thickness when using high-pressure freezing28 and 10 µm at atmospheric pressure29). Ideally, to get good results with cryo-fixation of primate brain tissue, the sample has to be taken from a biopsy, causing problems in finding the exact location of the region of interest. This problem must be circumvented by using stereotaxic coordinates. The chemical fixation with acrolein and pre-embedding technique proposed above provides an easy, low-cost, time-efficient, and reliable method for sample preparation of primate brain tissue and immunolabeling for EM. By following these steps, one will obtain a well-preserved ultrastructure along with antigenicity to allow for the immunolabeling of most proteins. However, chemical fixation for EM also has its disadvantages. First, while fixative solutions such as acrolein preserve the morphological details of the brain tissue, it is possible that some morphological changes occur during the chemical fixation process and alter the results compared to those that would be obtained with CEMOVIS or cryo-substitution techniques. Second, the fixation process and subsequent dehydration needed for resin embedding remove most of the extracellular fluids and squeeze cellular components together, causing shrinkage of tissue that significantly modifies their size and shape compared to cryo-fixed cells21,30. Nonetheless, aldehyde fixation has been used successfully in many laboratories around the world and is widely accepted in the literature as a reliable method for studying the ultrastructural features of neurons and glial cells, despite previously mentioned concerns21,30,31,32.
By comparison with the method described above, the postembedding immunohistochemistry that is needed for cryo-fixed samples embedded in methacrylate resin, is less sensitive and the detection of central nervous system antigens is limited14,33. However, aldehyde fixation also has its limitations in regards to antigenicity. Therefore, it is important to test the specificity of the antibodies for a given chemical fixation protocol at the LM level before starting the EM preparation. The quality of immunohistochemistry on acrolein-fixed brain tissue also depends on previously breaking the strong aldehyde bonds created by the chemical fixation. This step can be achieved by incubating the sections before immunohistochemistry with sodium borohydride (see steps 3.3 – 3.5). Omitting this step would definitely result in suboptimal immunostaining34. If the antibodies to be used do not give optimal staining on brain sections fixed with acrolein, it is possible to alternatively use glutaraldehyde (0.1 – 2%) diluted in 4% PFA. This has been proven to well-preserve brain ultrastructure while sufficiently maintaining antigenicity for many antibodies and to provide brain tissue suitable for long-term storage with minimal alterations20,21,35,36,37. It is also possible to achieve relatively good fixation and antigenicity suitable for EM with PFA alone by significantly elevating the pH of the solution, but a combination of more than one fixative during perfusion has provided better results34, and studies support that PFA fixation alone generally produce poorly preserved tissue for EM examination38,39. However, in some rare cases, antigenicity is very difficult to maintain, and PFA fixation alone remains the only viable option for EM examination.
Many steps in this protocol should be followed carefully in order to obtain the optimal results. For instance, the preparation of the 4% PFA solution must be performed at temperatures above 45 °C in order to allow the PFA powder to dissolve, but it is imperative that the temperature remains below 60 °C. Otherwise, the PFA solution depolymerizes into formaldehyde and formic acid, which fixes the tissue differently and forms an acidic solution that could significantly alter tissue quality40,41. Additionally, it is critical that the perfusion steps be carried out rapidly once the diaphragm has been cut, since hypoxia and hypercapnia will produce irreversible physiological changes to the brain that could alter the quality and integrity of the tissue31. Defective fixation could be detrimental to the preservation of brain tissue and permanently alter the ultrastructure of the tissue, such as plasma membranes, mitochondria and synapses. Thus, solution preparation and perfusion steps need to be carried out with care. Successful EM sample preparation also highly depends upon a good post-fixation in osmium tetroxide. Indeed, direct perfusion with osmium tetroxide has been described as producing reasonably intact tissue for EM observation21,39. However, many differences in terms of the amount of the extracellular space and the appearance of the plasma membrane between osmium-perfused and aldehyde-perfused animals have been noticed. Furthermore, the blackening and hardening of the tissues after osmium perfusion rendered the removal of the brain from the skull, the subsequent dissection, and the differentiation between white and grey matter more difficult, favoring aldehyde perfusion for better tissue preservation and easier manipulation21. Aldehyde fixation alone appears to reduce the extracellular space, which alters the integrity of the tissue and gives the impression of tight junctions where extracellular space should be seen, thus failing to show acceptable electron micrographs even after lead citrate staining42. However, postfixation in osmium tetroxide reversed this situation by allowing a most definite separation between tissue elements, which is necessary for their identification42, thus clearly justifying the importance of carrying out the osmification steps (steps 4.1 – 4.2) with caution.
The conditions and concentrations under which these steps are carried have been tested in our laboratory, specifically for pre-embedding immunohistochemistry using DAB as the precipitate on primate brain sections. Although skill-challenging, double-immunohistochemistry is possible through post-embedding immunohistochemistry with gold particles43. The electron-dense DAB precipitate obtained after the immunoperoxidase-diaminobenzidine technique proposed here is very easy to identify at the EM level, since it outlines plasma membranes and outer surfaces of organelles, while still allowing the identification of sub-cellular components, such as mitochondria and synaptic contacts. Additionally, once the present technique is mastered for single immunohistochemistry, it is possible to perform double immunohistochemistry by combining DAB precipitate to gold particles, which are more easily discerned from one another than gold particles of different sizes. We would recommend doing rigorous testing of antibody specificity, osmium concentrations, and incubation time and temperature before processing brain sections for EM. Protocols for pre-embedding and double immunohistochemistry for EM have been previously published and can be adapted for primate brain tissue16.
In conclusion, the transcardiac perfusion protocol for non-human primates presented above allows for the long-term storage of brain sections that can subsequently be used for EM pre-embedding immunohistochemistry. Sections obtained are also suitable for neuroanatomical studies at the LM level. Hence, by using a protocol that is suitable for both EM and LM, it is possible to reduce the number of animals used, a cost-efficient and ethical consideration. It also allows a direct comparison between results obtained at the LM and EM levels on the same animal and allows the use of Correlative Light and Electron Microscopic (CLEM) studies. CLEM studies have mostly focused on the use of genetically engineered mice expressing fluorescent proteins, such as EGFP, which could later be labeled with electron-dense precipitate and observed at the EM level44. Alternatively, to circumvent the problem of immunohistochemistry, cryo-fixation can be combined with an intraneuronal injection of electron-dense markers, such as quantum dots45, prior to freezing, allowing visualization at the EM level46. However, quantum dots are not biocompatible, and their use is costly and time-consuming due to the additional freezing apparatus needed for subsequent tissue preparation. Although these techniques still favor cryo-fixation and freeze-substitution methods, there are some developments for the use of chemical tags on semi-thin (300 nm) sections to label different cellular proteins with synthetic fluorophores, which can be correlated with EM analysis47. Techniques allowing, for instance, the correlation between one specific axon localization using fluorescence and its synaptic relationship with neurons of a given target structure using EM, are rather promising for the understanding of the organization of the nervous system, specifically in primates. In this case, acrolein fixation should be favored over glutaraldehyde, as the latter will produce autofluorescence that could alter the proper visualization of brain structures at the LM level. However, very few studies of this type have been undertaken in primates, mostly due to technical challenges and the high cost that such experiments impose. Thus, new developments are needed for successful and low-cost CLEM studies in primates, such as improving fixation methods or using chemical tags visible at both the LM and EM levels.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This study was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC, 401848-2011 to M.P.). M.P received a career award from the Fonds de recherche du Québec-Santé (FRQ-S). L.E. was the recipient of a doctoral fellowship from the FRQ-S (FRQ-S 14D 29441). We thank Marie-Josée Wallman for technical assistance.
Dibasic anhydrous sodium phosphate (Na2HPO4) | Fisher scientific | S374-500 | |
Monobasic monohydrate sodium phosphate (NaH2PO4.H2O) | EM Science | SX0710-1 | |
Sodium chloride (NaCl) | Fisher scientific | S271-3 | |
Hydroxymethyl aminomethane (THAM) | Fisher scientific | T370-500 | |
HCl | EMD | HX0603-3 | 1N dilution. Product is corrosive. Use with appropriate potection. |
NaOH | EMD | SX0590-1 | 5N dilution. Product is corrosive. Use with appropriate protection. |
Paraformaldehyde | Sigma | P6148 | 4% dilution. Product is highly volatile in its powder form and highly toxic. Use with caution under a venting hood with appropriate protection. |
Acrolein (90%) | sigma | 110221 | 3% dilution. Product is highly toxic. Use under a venting hood with appropriate protection. |
Autopsy venting table | Mopec | CE400 | |
Electronic perfusion pump | cole parmer | masterflex L/S 7523-90 | |
Needle (perfusion) | terumo | NN-1838R | 18G 1 1/2 |
Needle | terumo | NN-2713R | 21G 1/2 |
Ketamine | 20 mg/kg | ||
Xylazine | 4 mg/kg | ||
Acepromazine | 0.5 mg/kg | ||
Scalpel | |||
Scalpel blades | Feather lance | 201011 J9913 | No.22 for surgery and No. 11 for EM |
Surgical scissors | |||
Rongeurs | |||
Vibratome | Leica | VT 1200S | Calibrate blade before each use, when the device allows it |
Vibratome razor blade | Gillette | GIN 642107 | |
Glycerol | Fisher scientific | G33-4 | 30% dilution |
Ethylene glycol | Fisher scientific | E178-4 | 30% dilution |
Sodium borohydride (NaBH4) | sigma | S-9125 | |
Normal horse serum | Jackson immunoResearch Laboratories | 008-000-121 | 2% dilution |
Cold-fish gelatin | Aurion | 900.033 | 0.5% dilution. Original product is concentrated at 40% |
Primary antibody, SERT | Santa Cruz biotechnology | SC-1458 | 1/500 dilution |
Primary antibody, ChAT | Chemicon (Millipore) | AB144P | 1/25 dilution |
Primary antibody, TH | ImmunoStar | 22941 | 1/1000 dilution |
Biotinylated secondary antibody, goat | Vector laboratories | BA-9500 | 1/1000 dilution |
Biotinylated secondary antibody, mouse | Vector laboratories | BA-2000 | 1/1000 dilution |
Vectastain elite ABC kit | Vector laboratories | PK6100 | 8.8 µL/mL of A and B each |
3'3 diaminobenzidine (DAB) | Sigma | D5637 | 0,05% dilution. Product is highly volatile in its powder form and toxic. Do not throw waste in the sink. |
Peroxide (H2O2) 30% | Fisher scientific | H-323 | 0,005% dilution |
Osmium tetroxide (OsO4) | Electron microscopic science | 2% 19152 4% 19150 | Original solution can be either 2% ou 4%. Keep attention to which one is used to calculate the final 1% dilution. Product is very sensitive to light. Osmium is highly toxic. Use only under a venting hood with appropriate protection. |
Durcupan water-repellent epoxy resin | sigma | A: M epoxy resin (44611) B: hardener 964 (44612) C: accelerator 960 (DY 060) (44613) D: plasticizer (44614) | Polymerize 48h at 58 °C before throwing in waste. |
Alumium cups | Electron microscopic science | 70048-01 | |
Ethanol | commercial alcohols | 1019C | Dilute in distilled water with appropriate concentration |
Propylene oxide | Electron microscopic science | 20401 | Organic solvent. Highly volatile and toxic. Use under a venting hood. |
Non-coated medium glass slides | brain research laboratories | 3875-FR | Grease surface with mineral oil |
Plastic film (Aclar embedding film) | Electron microscopic science | 50425-25 | Grease surface with mineral oil |
Ultramicrotome | Leica UC7 | EM UC7 | |
Diamond trimming tool (ultratrim) | Diatome | UT 1081 | Can use glass knife alternatively |
Ultra 45° Diatome Diamond knife | Diatome | MC13437 | equipped with a boat |
Xylenes | Fisher scientific | X5SK-4 | |
150-mesh copper grids | Electron microscopic science | G150-cu | |
grid-box | Electron microscopic science | 71138 | Can store up to 100 grids |
Sodium citrate | Anachemia | 81983 | |
Lead nitrate | sigma | L-6258 | Make a stock solution of lead citrate made of 1.33 g of lead nitrate and 1.76g of sodium citrate diluted in 42 mL of pre-boiled and cooled distilled water to which 8 mL of 1N NaOH are added after the conversion from lead nitrate to lead citrate is complete. pH should be approximately 12. Store solution in a hermetic plastic bottle and protect from light. |
Syringe | terumo | SS-05L | 5 mL |
Syringe filter | corning | 431222 | 0.2 µm |
Absorbing paper (bibulous paper) | Electron microscopic science | 70086-1 | |
Parafilm | Laboratory film | PM-999 | |
Mineral oil | Sigma | M5904 |