Use of lead aspartate block staining in quantitative EM autoradiography of phospholipids: application to myelinating peripheral nerve.

For quantitation of electron microscope (EM) autoradiographs, micrographs must contain clear images which are relatively free of heavy metal precipitates. Satisfactory contrast is usually obtained by staining individual ultra-thin sections with lead citrate. It was recently reported that sequential block staining of tissue with ferrocyanide-reduced osmium tetroxide and lead aspartate produced excellent contrast for EM autoradiography, with sections relatively free of lead precipitate. This protocol avoids the manipulation involved in staining individual ultra-thin sections. We have adapted this method to quantitative EM autoradiographic studies, primarily of phospholipid metabolism in peripheral nerve. We show that block staining with lead aspartate provides: (a) ultrastructural contrast of routinely high quality for myelinated peripheral nerve; (b) high (greater than 98%) retention of glycero-labeled lipid during dehydration and embedment; and (c) a distribution of de novo tritiated glycerol-labeled lipid in ultra-thin sections that is quantitatively identical to the distribution recorded for samples stained by the more laborious post-embedment method. During a 2-hr labeling period in vivo, tritiated glycerol is incorporated into phosphatidylcholine (44%), phosphatidylethanolamine (22%), other phospholipids (16%), and neutral lipids (15%). The analysis of grain distribution in developing sciatic nerve labeled for 2 hr with tritiated glycerol demonstrates that myelinating Schwann cells play the major role in synthesis of endoneurial lipids. Lipid synthesis in myelinated fibers is localized in perinuclear regions of Schwann cell cytoplasm. These regions lie external to compact myelin. Unmyelinated fibers and other endoneurial cells independently incorporate glycerol into lipids.

[1]  R. Gould,et al.  Schwann Cell , 2020, Definitions.

[2]  R. Gould,et al.  Localization of Phospholipid Synthesis to Schwann Cells and Axons , 1987, Journal of neurochemistry.

[3]  R. Gould,et al.  Phospholipid Metabolism in Mouse Sciatic Nerve In Vivo , 1987, Journal of neurochemistry.

[4]  B. Kopriwa Block-staining tissues with potassium ferrocyanide-reduced osmium tetroxide and lead aspartate for electron microscopic radioautography. , 1984, The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society.

[5]  J Walton,et al.  Lead asparate, an en bloc contrast stain particularly useful for ultrastructural enzymology. , 1979, The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society.

[6]  M. A. Williams,et al.  Quantitative Methods in Biology , 1978 .

[7]  R. Gould,et al.  Incorporation of newly formed lecithin into peripheral nerve myelin , 1976, The Journal of cell biology.

[8]  M. Hayat,et al.  Basic electron microscopy techniques , 1973 .

[9]  G. Mckhann,et al.  [2‐3H]GLYCEROL AS A PRECURSOR OF PHOSPHOLIPIDS IN RAT BRAIN: EVIDENCE FOR LACK OF RECYCLING , 1973, Journal of neurochemistry.

[10]  N. Gregson,et al.  The in vivo and ultrastructural effects of injection of lysophosphatidyl choline into myelinated peripheral nerve fibres of the adult mouse. , 1971, Journal of Cell Science.

[11]  M. Salpeter,et al.  RESOLUTION IN ELECTRON MICROSCOPE RADIOAUTOGRAPHY , 1969, The Journal of cell biology.

[12]  A. W. Rogers Techniques of autoradiography , 1967 .

[13]  E. Reynolds THE USE OF LEAD CITRATE AT HIGH pH AS AN ELECTRON-OPAQUE STAIN IN ELECTRON MICROSCOPY , 1963, The Journal of cell biology.