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University of Minnesota
Department of Genetics, Cell Biology and Development
6-160 Jackson Hall
321 Church St SE
Minneapolis, MN 55455
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Click the thumbnail to show a tissue section of pancreas stained with hematoxylin.
Hematoxylin is a basic (positively charged) dye with a high affinity for acidic (negatively charged) cellular components, especially nucleic acids and ribosomes. Basophilic structures stain blue/purple with hematoxylin.
Acinar cells, constituting 98% of the pancreas, are secretory cells that produce the protein precursors of digestive enzymes stored in large granules.
Hematoxylin alone provides limited information about cellular structures beyond nuclei and ribosomes
Click the thumbnail to show a tissue section of pancreas stained with eosin.
Eosin is an acidic (negatively charged) dye with a high affinity for basic (positively charged) cellular components, especially cytoplasmic proteins and mitochondria. Acidophilic (also known as eosinophilic) structures stain pink/red with eosin.
Acinar cells, constituting 98% of the pancreas, are secretory cells that produce the protein precursors of digestive enzymes stored in large granules.
Eosin alone provides limited information about cellular structures beyond protein-rich organelles, such as mitochondria and secretory granules.
Click the thumbnail to show a tissue section of pancreas stained with hematoxylin and eosin.
Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) combine two complementary basic and acidic dyes to provide excellent contrast between nuclear and cytoplasmic components. Most cellular structures are more easily identified when viewed with both dyes together than with either dye alone.
Acinar cells exhibit the classic H&E staining pattern, which clearly reveals the cellular organization of typical secretory role.
The complementary staining of hematoxylin and eosin creates maximum visual contrast between nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments. Cellular detail is better than either hematoxylin or eosin used alone. This explains why H&E remains the preferred staining technique in histology and pathology.
Click the thumbnail to show a tissue section of pancreas stained with hematoxylin.
While acinar cells demonstrate the most dramatic staining pattern due to their high metabolic activity, other cell types in pancreatic tissue exhibit distinct but more subtle responses to
Hematoxylin alone provides limited information about cellular structures beyond nuclei and ribosomes. The contractile machinery that defines smooth muscle remains largely invisible.
Click the thumbnail to show a tissue section of pancreas stained with hematoxylin.
Eosin staining reveals the protein-rich components of cells, providing complementary information to hematoxylin about cellular structure and function.
Eosin alone provides limited information about cellular structures beyond protein-rich organelles, such as mitochondria. The contractile machinery that defines smooth muscle stains is stained because it is composed of proteins.
Click the thumbnail to show a tissue section of pancreas stained with hematoxylin and eosin.
The combination of hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) provides superior visualization of all pancreatic cell types that cannot be achieved with either dye alone. They create contrast between nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments essential for understanding their structure and function.
Similar to acinar cells, the complementary staining of hematoxylin and eosin creates maximum visual contrast between nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments. Cellular detail is better than either hematoxylin or eosin used alone.