SUMMARY
An imbalance of potassium in cardiac muscle causes an alteration of heart function. The distribution and concentration of potassium in rat papillary heart muscle was studied using cryofixation and X‐ray microanalysis. Freeze‐dried cryosections and sections of freeze‐dried, embedded tissue were analysed. Bulk frozen specimens were freeze‐dried either in a vacuum or by a new technique using liquid propane as a cryodehydration medium. These two methods of freeze‐drying were tested for elemental retention in other specimens, with comparable results. A potassium concentration of 120 mmol/l was measured in normal myocytes of cardiac papillary muscle compared to 80 mmol/l in myocytes of animals stressed by a temperature of 45°C for 1 h. The presumed physiological significance of the findings is discussed.
Summary
The cell volume alteration participates in a wide variety of cellular functions that may interfere with intra‐cellular homeostasis. The most adequate approach of estimation of the volume changes induced by osmotic misbalance, alteration in shape and size due to the action shape forming substances, etc., is the direct measurement of volumetric parameters of embryos. In the given research, the volume magnitude and kinetics of changes in volume and surface area of blastomere and polar bodies of early mouse embryos were determined using three‐dimensional reconstruction of the optical section stack obtained with laser scanning microscope (LSM). The size and surface area were determined for isotonic and anisosmotic conditions. The physiological significance of the findings is discussed.
Regulatory volume decrease in response to hypotonic stress is typical of the oocytes and early mouse embryos. Changes in the kinetics of osmotic reaction can be used as a marker of the modulating effect of the incubation medium on transmembrane transport in embryonic cells. Quantitative laser scanning microtomography (QLSM) was used to measure oocyte volume. In this paper, it is shown that addition of 5 μM glycine, taurine, or GABA, as well as ATP to Dulbecco's medium abolished the regulatory volume decrease in mature mouse oocytes.
The 2D-molecular thin film analysis protocol for fully grown mice oocytes is described using an innovative approach. Time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), atomic force microscopy (AFM) and optical microscopy imaging were applied to the same mice oocyte section on the same sample holder. A freeze-dried mice oocyte was infiltrated into embedding media, e.g. Epon, and then was cut with a microtome and 2 μm thick sections were transferred onto an ITO coated conductive glass. Mammalian oocytes can contain "nucleolus-like body" (NLB) units and ToF-SIMS analysis was used to investigate the NLB composition. The ion-spatial distribution in the cell components was identified and compared with the images acquired by SEM, AFM and optical microscopy. This study presents a significant advancement in cell embryology, cell physiology and cancer-cell biochemistry.
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