In a case of a pituitary adenoma in the clivus bone in a 71-year-old man, ultrastructural investigation using conventional aldehyde-fixed, epoxy-embedded tissue revealed the tumor to be composed of cells with euchromatic nuclei, dense nucleoli, abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum, spherical secretory granules, and granule extrusion at the lateral cell surface, all of which suggest a prolactin-producing adenoma. Using a protein A-gold immunolabeling technique on snap-frozen tissue subsequently fixed in a mild fixative and embedded in a hydrophilic resin, the presence of prolactin immunoreactivity within secretory granules at the ultrastructural level was demonstrated. This case represented the first use of protein A-gold immunolabeling at the electron microscopic level for diagnostic purposes at our institution and exemplifies the value of this technique when the need for diagnostic immunoelectron microscopy is not anticipated. Because this tumor arose in an unusual location, ultrastructural study, including immunoelectron microscopy, not only confirmed the light microscopic diagnosis of pituitary adenoma, but further allowed subclassification of the tumor.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/01913129309027799 | DOI Listing |
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