Transcript File

Staining Methods
Steps in the processing of tissues
1. Fixation – preservation of tissues in its
original condition.
2. Dehydration – removal of water from tissues.
3. Clearing – infiltration of paraffin solvent.
4. Embedding – infiltration of paraffin wax.
5. Microtomy – preparing thin slices of tissues.
6. Staining – colouring of tissues.
7. Mounting – arranging tissues on slides.
Why We Need To Stain the
Tissues ???
Staining
 Without
staining, the tissue section
would remain translucent and we
would still have difficulty identifying
the relevant cell types and features.
 Staining
using colored dyes provides a
mechanism for introducing contrast.
Staining
 stain
tissue components more or
less selectively, with many
behaving like acidic or basic
compounds.
Staining
Cell components such as nucleic acids with
a net negative charge (anionic) stain more
readily with basic dyes and are termed
basophilic
 cationic components, such as proteins with
many ionized amino groups, have affinity for
acidic dyes and are termed acidophilic.

Examples of basic dyes are toluidine blue,
alcian blue, and methylene blue.
 Hematoxylin , staining behaves like a basic
dye basophilic tissue components.

Tissue Staining
Basophilic
Basophilic
 Stain with basic dye
[dye+Cl-]
 Toluidine blue, methylene
blue, hematoxylin, alcian
blue
 Nucleic acids, some
cytoplasmic components
(rRNA and rER),
glycosaminoglycans and
acidic glycoproteins

Acidophilic
 Stain
with acidic dye
[Na+dye-]
 Orange G, eosin, acid
fuschin
 Mitochondria,
cytoplasm, secretory
granules, ECM proteins
H&E Stain
(Eeosin is the counterstain to Hematoxylin)

Hematoxylin produces a dark blue or
purple color, staining DNA in the cell
nucleus and other acidic structures (such
as RNA-rich portions of the cytoplasm
and the matrix of cartilage).

In contrast, Eosin stains other
cytoplasmic components and collagen. In
many staining procedures certain
structures such as nuclei become visible,
but other parts of cells remain color free.
H&E Stain
Other notable stains

Masson Trichrome– most common

Usually used to look at collagen in the
extracellular matrix
Nuclei (basophilic) – blue/black
 Collagen – green or blue
 Cytoplasm, muscle, keratin, erythrocytes –
red

Masson Trichrome
Silver stain

Silver stains reticular and collagen
fibres in brown to black.

Silver methods are used for staining
of neurons in neurohistology.
Gold and Silver Stains
Gold staining of motor end
plate
in muscle
Silver stain of reticular fibers
(type III collagen)
String-like appearance in this
image