Picrosirius Red Staining: Revisiting Its Application to the Qualitative and Quantitative Assessment of Collagen Type I and Type III in Tendon

Author:

López De Padilla Consuelo M.1,Coenen Michael J.1,Tovar Alejandro2,De la Vega Rodolfo E.13,Evans Christopher H.1,Müller Sebastian A.4

Affiliation:

1. Musculoskeletal Gene Therapy Research Laboratory, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

2. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

3. Department cBITE, MERLN Institute, Maastricht University, The Netherlands

4. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Kantonsspital Baselland, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland (Research Collaborator [limited tenure], Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota)

Abstract

Collagen has a major role in the structural organization of tendons. Picrosirius red (PSR) staining viewed under polarized light microscopy is the standard method to evaluate the organization of collagen fibers in tissues. It is also used to distinguish between type I and type III collagen in tissue sections. However, accurate analysis and interpretation of PSR images are challenging because of technical factors and historical misconceptions. The aim of this study was to clarify whether collagen types I and III can be distinguished by PSR staining in rat Achilles tendons, using double immunohistochemistry as the positive control. Our findings showed that PSR staining viewed with polarized light microscopy was suitable for qualitative and quantitative assessment of total collagen but was not able to distinguish collagen types. We found it critical to use a polarizing microscope equipped with a rotating stage; tendon section orientation at 45° with respect to crossed polarizers was optimal for the qualitative and quantitative assessment of collagen organization. Immunohistochemistry was superior to PSR staining for detection of collagen type III. We also compared formalin and Bouin solution as fixatives. Both produced similar birefringence, but formalin-fixed tendons provided higher quality histological detail with both hematoxylin–eosin and immunostaining:

Funder

mayo clinic

John and Posy Krehbiel Professorship

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Histology,Anatomy

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