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Original Article

Photographic Mapping of a Tissue Surface to Locate Fields for Electron Microscopy; Mouse Lung

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Pages 63-69 | Published online: 12 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Precise sampling from whole lobes of mouse lungs fixed in the inflated state and embedded in epoxy resin can be not only feasible but also efficient. A 1 μm section is cut from an embedded lobe with a rotary microtome and a steel knife. This section is stained and photographed, and from it a 35 × enlarged print is prepared. A grid of transparent plastic scored with 35 mm squares, lettered vertically and numbered horizontally, is superimposed over the photograph. The area chosen for electron microscopy thus becomes identifiable by a letter-number designation obtained from the grid. This area is then located by light microscopy on a 2 mm slice taken from the block from which the 1 μm section was cut, by use of oblique illumination and the calibrated mechanical stage of the light microscope. A block of 1.3 mm diameter is removed for electron microscopy from the tissue by a rotatable circular spring-loaded punch screwed into the objective turret of the microscope. The removed cylinder is mounted on a metal stub and ultrathin sections cut from the faced tissue. The method is as equally suitable for the examination of other tissues, particularly when large areas and multiple sampling may be required.

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