High-Resolution Histology for Craniofacial Studies on Zebrafish and Other Teleost Models.

Methods Mol Biol

Biology Department, Research Group Evolutionary Developmental Biology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.

Published: January 2022

In the era of molecular biology, identification of cells and even tissues mostly relies on the presence of fluorescent tags, or of "marker gene" expression. We list a number of caveats and present a protocol for embedding, sectioning, and staining semithin plastic sections. The method is neither new nor innovative, but is meant to revive skills that tend to get lost.This easy-to-use and inexpensive protocol (1) yields high-resolution images in transmitted and polarized light, (2) can be utilized simultaneously for transmission electron microscopy, and (3) is applicable to any type of material (wild type, morphants, mutants, transgenic, or pharmacologically treated animals as well as all of their controls), provided the sample size is kept under a limit. Thus, we hope to encourage researchers to use microanatomy and histology to complement molecular studies investigating, e.g., gene function.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-1847-9_17DOI Listing

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