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Tissue Printing for Scanning Electron Microscopy and Microanalysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

Barbara A. Reine*
Affiliation:
University of Washington

Extract

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The study of plant morphology and plant cells in the scanning electron microscope is often compromised by the limitations of specimen preparation techniques. Air drying usually results in unacceptable shrinkage and distortion of the normal surface morphology of plant cells. Chemical fixation followed by critical point drying or chemical drying using fluorocarbon compounds improves morphological results but still imparts artifacts, adds chemical constituents to the specimen, and requires the use of toxic chemicals, a hood, and much time.

One technique that eliminates many of these disadvantages and is even suitable for specimen preparation in the field is tissue printing. For easy, quick recording of stem anatomy and collection of cell exudates for subsequent analysis, its “elegant simlicity” is compelling. Historically, the application of tissue printing has been in connection with optical microscopy. However, this technique works very well for SEM and associated elemental characterization of residues by x-ray microanalysis. The tissue print technique applied to SEM is much the same as for optical microscopy.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 1994

References

1 Cassab, G.I. & Varner, J.E. (1989) Tissue Printing On Nitrocellulose Paper: A New Method for Immunolocatizalion of Proteins, Localization of Enzyme Activities and Anatomical Aanalysis, Cell Biol. Intnl. Reports 13: 147152 Google Scholar
2 Reid, P.D. et al. (1990) Anatomical Changes and Immunolocalization of Cellulase. During Abscission as Observed on Nitrocellulose Tissue Prints. Plant Physiol. 93, 160 Google Scholar
3 Reid, P D & Pont-Lezica, R.F. (ed.) (1992) Tissue Printing: Tools for the Study of Anatomy. Histochemistry, and Gene Expression. Academic Press, San Diego.Google Scholar
4 Reine, BA (1992) Localization of Silica in Equisetum srrense (Horsetail). Proc. EMSA 1992. San Francisco Press, 856 Google Scholar