Current chemical concepts were applied to Weigert's, M. Heidenhain's and Verhoeff's iron hemateins, Mayer's acid hemalum stain and the corresponding brazilein compounds. Fe bonds tightly to oxygen in preference to nitrogen and is unlikely to react with lysyl and arginyl groups of proteins. Binding of unoxidized hematoxylin by various substrates has long been known to professional dyers and was ascribed to hydrogen bonding. Chemical data on the uptake of phenols support this theory. Molecular models indicate a nonplanar configuration of hematoxylin and brazilin. The traditional quinonoid formula of hematein and brazilein was revised. During chelate formation each of the two oxy- groups of the dye shares an electron pair with the metal and contributes a negative charge to the chelate. Consequently, the blue or black 2:1 (dye:metal) complexes are anionic. Olation of such chelates affects the staining properties of iron hematein solutions. The color changes upon oxidation of hematoxylin, reaction of hematein with metals, and during exposure of chelates to acids can be explained by molecular orbital theory. Without differentiation or acid in dye chelate solutions, staining patterns are a function of the metal. Reactions of acidified solutions are determined by the affinities of the dye ligands. Brazilein is much more acid-sensitive than hematein. This difference can be ascribed to the lack of a second free phenolic -OH group in brazilein, i.e. one hydrogen bond is insufficient to anchor the dye to tissues. Since hematein and brazilein are identical in all other respects, their differences in affinity cannot be explained by van der Waals, electrostatic, hydrophobic or other forces.
Maresch (1905) introduced Bielschowsky's silver impregnation technic for neurofibrils as a stain for reticulum fibers, but emphasized the nonspecificity of such procedures. This lack of specificity has been confirmed repeatedly. Yet, since the 1920's the definition of "reticulin" and studies of its distribution were based solely on silver impregnation technics. The chemical mechanism and specificity of this group of stains is obscure. Application of Gomori's and Wilder's methods to human tissues showed variations of staining patterns with the fixatives and technics employed. Besides reticulum fibers, various other tissue structures, e.g. I bands of striated muscle, fibers in nervous tissues, and model substances, e.g. polysaccharides, egg white, gliadin, were also stained. Deposition of silver compounds on reticulum fibers was limited to an easily removable substance; the remaining collagen component did not bind silver. These histochemical studies indicate that silver impregnation technics for reticulum fibers have no chemical significance and cannot be considered as histochemical technics for "reticulin" or type III collagen.
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