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Acid alcoholic brilliant cresyl blue stain for gastric and other mucins

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Summary

Some but not all samples of brilliant cresyl blue (6-methyl-7-dimethylamino-2-phenoxazin chloride) under C. I. No. 51010 in Conn's Biological Stains when dissolved at 1% level in 50–70% alcohol containing 1% concentrated (12 N) hydrochloric acid, stain (in 30 min) a wide variety of human and laboratory animal mucins blue black on an almost unstained background. The mucoprotein of the gastric surface epithelium and of the peptic gland neck cells of several species reacts strongly. A 16 hr 60° C methylation in 0.1 M methyl-sulfuric acid in methanol is required to block the staining of these gastric and some intestinal mucins, while 1–2 hr intervals suffice to prevent the staining of mast cells, cartilage and metachromatic sulfomucins generally. Saponification (1% KOH/70% alcohol, 20min) does not restore staining in either location group, indicating that sulfate mucins are probably reacting in both.

Most other basic dyes fail to stain mucins from acid alcohol solutions: azure A, toluidine blue, resorcin blue, orcein, resorufin, azoresorufin brown, azolitmin, lacmoid, gallocyanin, Nile blue, methylene green, pararosanilin, crystal violet, Victoria blue R. Some staining occurred with one of three lots of Victoria blue B, with two lots of Victoria blue 4 R and with one lot each of Bernthsen's methylene violet, elastin violet PR and elastin purple PP.

The stain may be preceded by the Feulgen reaction to give red nuclei, or followed by a brief collagen stain in an alcoholic acid fuchsin (0.05–0.1%), picric acid (1.5%) solution.

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References

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Presented before the Symposium of the Histochemische Gesellschaft in Hamburg, 28. September 1968.

Supported by National Cancer Institute Grant No. C-4816, National Institutes of Health.

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Lillie, R.D., Pizzolato, P. Acid alcoholic brilliant cresyl blue stain for gastric and other mucins. Histochemie 17, 138–144 (1969). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00277779

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00277779

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