Abstract
1. The egg-shell in many trematodes and pseudophyllidean cestodes is a quinone-tanned protein; and histochemical methods for polyphenol oxidase or for phenols may be used to demonstrate regions producing or containing shell material (i.e. the vitellaria, its ducts and the uterus) in whole mount preparations.2. Specimens so treated may be further stained by routine whole mount methods. Gower's carmine is particularly recommended.3. 70% alcohol was found to be the best general fixative for these methods.4. These histochemical methods—with certain modifications—may also be used for demonstrating the egg-shell producing regions in sections.5. Because of their affinity for basic proteins, bromo-phenol-blue and malachite green are suitable for staining these regions in sections. These stains are unsuitable for whole mounts.6. There is some evidence to suggest that all trematodes and pseudophyllidean cestodes do not form and harden their egg-shell by quinone tanning; consequently, some forms may give negative or unsatisfactory results with these methods.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Reference11 articles.
1. A technique for the histochemical demonstration of polyphenol oxidase and its application to egg-shell formation in helminths and byssus formation in Mytilus;Smyth;Quart. J. micr. Sci.,1954
2. Specific Staining of Egg-Shell Material in Trematodes and Cestodes
3. THE CYTOCHEMICAL STAINING AND MEASUREMENT OF PROTEIN WITH MERCURIC BROMPHENOL BLUE
4. On the hardening of the ootheca ofBlatta orientalis
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