An improved acriflavine-Feulgen methodJW Levinson, S Retzel and JJ McCormick
The acriflavine-Feulgen method for the histochemical demonstration of deoxyribonucleic acid was modified by staining hydrolyzed cells with 0.01% acriflavine dissolved in 90% ethanol. This method offered the following advantages: (a) it simplified the preparation of the acriflavine-Feulgen reagent; (b) it left the cytoplasm essentially unstained while staining the nuclei bright green in hydrolyzed cells and left the cytoplasm and nuclei essentially unstained in unhydrolyzed cells; (c) it eliminated poorly defined reagents from the staining solutions. Because of these staining properties, this technique may be especially useful in the quantitative determination of deoxyribonucleic acid by cytofluorometry.
Volume 25,
Issue 5,
pp. 355-358,
05/01/1977
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J. D. McEvoy, U. Kossatz, N. Malek, and J. D. Singer Constitutive Turnover of Cyclin E by Cul3 Maintains Quiescence Mol. Cell. Biol., May 15, 2007; 27(10): 3651 - 3666. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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