Practical 2: Haematoxylin and Eosin Stain Flashcards
How wide are your microtomy slices
4 to 5 microns
Describe the H&E stain
Aluminium-mordanted haematoxylin stain the nuclei
Proteins are stained varying shades of pink/red with the acidic dye Eosin
How do you use your haematoxylin stani
The basic dye is applied and stains regressively -> negatively charged groups in tissue will stain but the nucleus will be more intense
The section will have a pink/purple colour before blueing
Why do we need a differentiation step?
Allows for the selective removal of excess dye from components which have weekly bound the dye, resulting in the nuclei remaining stained and the cytoplasm clear
Must be checked microscopically to avoid over or under-differentiation
How does blueing work
The pH of haematoxylin is low and the dye is pink
Washing in tap water raises the pH and changes the dye absorption so that it appears blue under the microscope
How do you stain with Eosin
(3)
Eosin is an acid dye which will stain all components unstained by haematoxylin
It is a progressive stain as it does not require differentiation
It is a counterstain to haematoxylin
Why do you need to dehydrate your slide
So that the slide can be placed in an organic solvent (xylene) and cover-slipped in a resin that solidifies and is a high refractive index and so it can be stored indefinitely
What should you do to imprints and frozen tissue before staining
Fix sections in spirit