1. Histochemical staining of the complex carbohydrates of the midgut of the mosquito, Culex tarsalis coquillett
- Author
-
Edward J. Houk, Robert E. Chiles, and James L. Hardy
- Subjects
Ruthenium red ,Midgut ,Basolateral plasma membrane ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Cell junction ,Staining ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,Tannic acid ,medicine ,Basal lamina ,Molecular Biology ,Epithelial polarity - Abstract
Histochemical staining of the midgut epithelial cell surface complex carbohydrates of the mosquito Culex tarsalis was examined electron microscopically. The microvillar surface is composed primarily of neutral vic -glycoconjugates; positively stained by silver methenamine and silver protein. Lanthanum and alcian blue staining indicate that the microvilli contain a minimal anionic component; possibly phosphoglycoconjugates. Similarly, the intercellular junctions contain a predominance of neutral vic -glycoconjugates. In addition, the intercellular junctions contain fixed positive charges, based on en bloc phosphotungstic acid staining. The midgut basolateral membrane system and the basal lamina are both highly anionic; stained by ruthenium red, tannic acid, alcian blue and periodic acid-chromic acid-phosphotungstic acid. The basolateral plasma membrane also contains some vic -glycoconjugates. Selective staining indicates that the anionic component of the basolateral plasma membrane and the basal lamina is predominantly carboxyl groups; no specific staining for sulfo- or phosphoglycoconjugates was observed.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF