1. Polyethylene Glycol Embedment for Histological Studies of Bean Seed Testa of Low Moisture Content
- Author
-
Roman Holubowicz and Martin C. Goffinet
- Subjects
Alternative methods ,Plants, Medicinal ,Chromatography ,Moisture ,Embedment ,Histological Techniques ,Fabaceae ,Polyethylene glycol ,Palisade cell ,Polyethylene Glycols ,Thionin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Paraffin ,Seeds ,PEG ratio ,Anatomy ,Water content - Abstract
Light microscopic examination of the structure of seed testa of snap and semihard bean seeds with 6% and 12% moisture contents in paraffin sections was unsuccessful because of poor paraffin infiltration and subsequent separation of subjacent and palisade cell layers. We devised an alternative method using polyethylene glycol (PEG) as the embedding material. Specimens were killed and fixed in the usual manner. They were then run up through a graded series (25, 50, 75, 100%) of PEG 1000 to PEG 1450, and finally embedded in a mixture of PEG 1450 and 4000 (19:1 by weight). Transverse and longitudinal sections retained excellent morphological detail and were suitable for histological study. Sections temporarily stained with 0.025% thionin allowed good quality photomicrographs.
- Published
- 1988