
doi: 10.1007/bf02462789
pmid: 175040
A modified technique for the ultrastructural localisation of heavy metals is described in this paper. The method involves precipitation of heavy metals as sulphides in the tissue by using (NH4)2 S after brief fixation in glutaraldehyde. The sulphides are, in the presence of a physical developer, then used to catalyse the reduction of silver ions into visible molecular silver. This latter step of physical development has been normally carried out after embedding and sectioning. However, when we followed this method we found that the dark metal sulphide was lost from the tissue during the embedding in epoxy resin. Hence the method was unsuitable for our proposed experiment on the ultrastructural localisation of cadmium. We subsequently modified the technique primarily by treating very thin tissue slices with the developer before dehydration and embedding, thus eliminating any problem from sulphide loss. This modified technique was used to investigate the ultrastructural localisation of cadmium in the kidneys of mice which had been exposed to 50 ppm cadmium in their drinking water for up to eight months. The molecular silver was found to be located mainly in the proximal tubule cells, either as dense clumps in apical vesicles and lysosomes or diffuse grains throughout the cytoplasm of the cells particularly in the basal region. We interpret these results as indicating that cadmium is found in the apical vesicles, lysosomes and cytoplasm of proximal tubule cells.
Cadmium Poisoning, Silver, Histocytochemistry, Sulfides, Kidney, Kidney Tubules, Proximal, Organoids, Mice, Animals, Chemical Precipitation, Female, Lysosomes, Cadmium
Cadmium Poisoning, Silver, Histocytochemistry, Sulfides, Kidney, Kidney Tubules, Proximal, Organoids, Mice, Animals, Chemical Precipitation, Female, Lysosomes, Cadmium
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