Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, Vol. 45, 119-128, Copyright © 1997 by The Histochemical Society, Inc.


ARTICLE

In Situ Localization of Two Fibrillar Collagens in Two Compact Connective Tissues by Immunoelectron Microscopy After Cryotechnical Processing

G. Nicolasa, F. Gaillb, and L. Zylberbergc
a Centre de Microscopie Electronique, UPMC, Paris, France
b Laboratoire de Biologie Marine, CNRS UPR 9042 Roscoff and UPMC, Paris, France
c Laboratoire d'Anatomie Comparée, CNRS URA 1137, Université Paris 7-Denis Diderot, Paris, France

Correspondence to: G. Nicolas, Centre Interuniversitaire de Microscopie Electronique (CIME), Case 197, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, 7, quai Saint Bernard, 75252 Paris Cedex 05, France.


  Summary
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Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Two fibrillar collagens, the worm cuticular collagen and the vertebrate Type I fish scale collagen, both organized in a compact tissue, were localized by immunogold electron microscopy in resin sections after freeze-fixation and freeze-substitution. Identification of these two fibrillar collagens failed with the use of postembedding labeling after conventional electron microscopic processing. Positive labeling of the Type I collagen was observed in sections of fish scales freeze-fixed by either slam-freezing or high-pressure freezing, freeze-substituted in acetone with or without osmium tetroxide, and embedded in LR White. The worm cuticular collagen was detected in sections of cuticle that were freeze-fixed, freeze-substituted (necessarily with osmium tetroxide added to acetone), and embedded in either LR White or Epon. It was also detected in specimens pre-fixed by aldehydes before freeze-fixation. The Type I fish scale collagen appears to be more sensitive than the fibrillar cuticular collagen of worms to the procedures employed for postembedding immunoelectron microcopy. Our results have shown that freeze-fixation and freeze-substitution preserved the antigenicity of the fibrillar collagens organized in a compact three-dimensional network, whereas immunolabeling failed after conventional electron microscopic procedures. These cryostabilization techniques appear to be of value to improve the immunolocalization of collagens. (J Histochem Cytochem 45:119-128, 1997)

Key Words: Freeze-fixation, Freeze-substitution, Compact connective tissues, Immunogold electron, microscopy, Cuticular collagen, Type I collagen


  Introduction
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Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

In some connective tissues, fibrillar collagens organized in highly ordered arrangements form compact structures comparable to plywood. Such spatial arrangements of the collagenous network were described in the cuticle of marine invertebrates (Gaill et al. 1994 ) and the basal plate of the scales of bony fish (Giraud et al. 1978 ). The presence of these densely packed collagen fibrils forming plywood-like structures in the integument of invertebrates and vertebrates can be related to the protective functions of these connective tissues. Biophysical and biochemical properties of connective tissues are at least in part determined by the macromolecular organization of the different types of fibrillar collagens identified in extracellular matrices (Kielty et al. 1993 ; Van der Rest and Garrone 1991 ; Mayne and Burgeson 1987 ). Data about their distribution rely on electron microscopy combined with immunolabeling (reviewed by Birk and Linsenmayer 1994 ). It is necessary to examine collagen distribution without prior disruption, displacement, or extraction of the matrix components. The limitation of immunoelectron microscopic studies is related to the problem of preserving tissues after processing in a state as close to native as possible.

Conventional methods using aqueous fixations, dehydration, and embedding induce changes in the structure and composition of the tissues, including extraction, precipitation, displacement, and loss of antigenicity. To overcome the problems induced by chemical fixation and dehydration, alternative methods of tissue processing have been developed (Kellenberger and Hayat 1991 ). Pre-embedding immunolabeling has provided invaluable data about the molecular topology of the collagen fibrils (Fleischmajer et al. 1990 ; Birk et al. 1988 ), but these immunoelectron microscopic techniques have been applied after disruptive treatments that may induce disorganization of the tissue architecture. Another strategy for concomitantly preserving ultrastructure and antigenicity of tissues involves cryotechniques (Nicolas 1991 ; Nicolas et al. 1989 ), such as ultra-rapid freeze-fixation or high-pressure freezing followed by freeze-substitution, which improve the quality of the ultrastructural preservation and preserve the antigenicity of connective tissues (Young et al. 1995 ; Nicolas et al. 1994 ; Hunziker 1993 ; Keene and McDonald 1993 ; Hunziker and Herrmann, 1987).

In the present study, immunological labeling was performed on tissues prepared by two procedures: (a) fresh material was treated either by ultra-rapid freezing or high-pressure freezing, freeze-substitution, and resin embedding; and (b) chemically fixed material was submitted to freeze-fixation, freeze-substitution, and embedding in the same way as the freshly isolated material. We tested the latter procedure because, due to the way the worms were collected during oceanic missions, the majority of the worm tissues were accessible only after glutaraldehyde fixation. This procedure was also applied on fish scales to compare the influence of the glutaraldehyde prefixation on the immunolabeling of two types of fibrillar collagens: (a) the unbanded fibrillar collagen of the worm cuticle, an extremely long molecule with a globular domain (Gaill et al. 1994 , Gaill et al. 1995 ; Mann et al. 1992 ; Murray and Tanzer 1985 ), which has no counterpart in vertebrates (Har-El and Tanzer 1993 ), and (b) the ubiquitous vertebrate Type I collagen, which is the main component of fish scales (Zylberberg et al. 1992a ; Kimura et al. 1991 ).


  Materials and Methods
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Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Animals
Invertebrates. Different types of marine worms were used, including the usual coastal annelid species and deep-sea hydrothermal vent worms. The coastal annelids, Harmothoe lunulata and Arenicola lunulata, were collected at the Roscoff marine station, whereas the vent vestimentifera species Riftia pachyptila was collected at a depth of 2600 meters in the Pacific Ocean during a French-American cruise (HERO 92). The cuticle of A. marina and of R. pachyptila was examined on small pieces removed from the body wall. In the shallow seawater scale worm Harmothoe lunulata, each ring presents two bioluminescent elytra covered with a cuticle. These elytra were used in the present study.

Vertebrates. Goldfish (Carassius auratus) of 60-80 mm SL (standard length; from snout to end of the caudal peduncle) were obtained commercially and kept in an aquarium with tapwater at about 20°C. Scales were removed from the mid-dorsal area below the dorsal fin to exclude structural variations that could be related to their localization.

Fixations
Chemical fixation. Immunolabeling using a pre-embedding procedure was carried out on chemically fixed worm cuticle and goldfish scales. Only the results obtained with the fish scale are mentioned in the present study, those obtained for the cuticle being published elsewhere (Hamraoui 1994 ). To apply pre-embedding labeling techniques, some scales of the goldfish were fixed in 2% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 7.4. They were washed in PBS containing 0.1 M lysine. The scales were submitted either to mechanical disruptive treatments (freezing in liquid nitrogen, tearing) or to chemical treatments (acetic acid action or enzymatic digestion using hyaluronidase or proteinases such as pronase or proteinase K) to facilitate penetration of the antibody-gold complexes. The scales were labeled according to the process described for the sections. Then the scales were fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde in PBS and postfixed in 1% osmium tetroxide in PBS. After dehydration in ethanol, the scales were embedded in Epon. The thin sections were double stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate.

Postembedding immunolabeling after cryofixation and cryosubstitution of prefixed material was tested on specimens treated by glutaraldehyde. Pieces of the body wall from the vent worm R. pachyptila were fixed immediately after recovery on board ship by injecting a 3% glutaraldehyde, 0.1 M sodium cacodylate-buffered solution (pH 7.4; 1 hr at 4°C). They were stored in sodium cacodylate buffer until further treatment in the laboratory. Both solutions were brought to sea osmolarity by addition of NaCl as previously described (Gaill et al. 1991 ).

Scales of the goldfish were fixed in 2% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate [pH 7.4; 1 hr at room temperature (RT)] and stored in sodium cacodylate buffer before performance of cryotechniques.

The samples were immersed for 1 hr in a solution of 20% glycerol in buffer and then cryofixed by the slam-freezing method as described below; for high-pressure freezing no glycerol was added in the buffer.

Cryofixations. The tissues were fixed by those of the following procedures that were opportune.

Cryofixation by Plunge-freezing. Small pieces of body wall of the vent worm R. pachyptila were cryofixed on board ship by plunging into liquid propane.

Cryofixation by Slam-freezing. The cuticle of the shallow seawater annelids H. lunulata and A. marina and the scales of the goldfish were rapid-frozen by slamming against a copper block cooled with liquid helium at -260°C, using a Cryoblock Reichert-Jung Leica (Escaig 1982 ) as previously described (Nicolas 1991 ).

High-pressure Freezing. This procedure was applied to the elytra of the annelid H. lunulata. Small pieces of elytra moistened with the freezing medium (1-hexadecene) (Hohenberg et al. 1994 ; Studer et al. 1989 ) were loaded into interlocking specimen holders (Craig et al. 1987 ) and frozen with liquid nitrogen under 2100 bars using the Balzers HPM 010 High Pressure Freezer (Bal-Tec Products; Selles sur Cher, France) (Moor 1987 ). The same procedure was applied to some scales of the goldfish.

Freeze-substitution
The frozen samples, stored in liquid nitrogen, were then transferred into the freeze-substitution medium at -90°C for 3 days as described previously (Nicolas 1991 ), either in pure acetone or in acetone containing 2.5% osmium tetroxide. A molecular sieve (type 4A 1/16; Union Carbide, Rungis, France) was added to the medium, which was gradually rewarmed from -90°C to -30°C over a period of 3 hr and left at -30°C for 2 hr. Some samples were kept in acetone at -20°C and embedded in LR White at -20°C. After a final rewarming to reach RT with a step of 30 min at this temperature, the other samples were washed in the pure solvent and embedded either in LR White polymerized at 50°C or in Epon.

Postembedding Immunogold Labeling
All steps of the labeling procedure, except the primary antibody incubation overnight, were performed at RT.

Ultrathin sections were collected on gold grids. They were washed for 15 min in a blocking solution of PBS containing 0.5% BSA (bovine serum albumin) and 0.05% Tween 20. The sections were then incubated overnight at 4°C in 20-µl drops of the blocking PBS containing the primary antibodies at the appropriate dilution. After several washes in pure PBS and one more in the PBS-BSA-Tween 20 for 15 min, the sections were incubated in the secondary gold-conjugated antibody. The sections were then washed in PBS. The immunoreaction was stabilized by floating the grids on 0.2% glutaraldehyde in PBS for 2 min. After several rinses in PBS and in distilled water, they were contrasted in aqueous saturated uranyl acetate solution.

Primary Antibodies. A polyclonal antibody raised against the native purified cuticular collagen of Arenicola following the standard protocols (Timpl 1982 ) was used as primary antibody, at a concentration of 1:200 in the PBS-BSA-Tween 20 solution. This antibody was known to crossreact with cuticle collagen of annelid and vestimentiferan species (Gaill et al. 1994 ; Hamraoui 1994 ).

The Type I collagen was identified in the goldfish scales using as primary antibody a polyclonal antibody raised against the dermal pepsin-digested Type I collagen of the goldfish (provided by Dr. D. J. Hartmann, Institut Pasteur, Lyon). This antibody was the same as that previously tested (Zylberberg et al. 1992a ). It was used at a concentration of 1:60 in the PBS-BSA-Tween 20 solution.

Secondary Antibodies. The sections of the worm cuticle were incubated with either protein A-gold complex using colloidal gold particles of 10 nm (Biocell; Cardiff, UK) at a concentration of 1:100 in the PBS-BSA-Tween solution or goat anti-rabbit IgG coupled with 5-nm gold particles (IgG5) (Amersham International; Poole, UK) at a concentration of 1:50 in the same solution. The sections of the fish scales were incubated with protein A-gold only.

To control the specificity of the labeling, the primary antibodies were substituted with appropriate dilutions of nonimmune rabbit serum or PBS-BSA-Tween solution.


  Results
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Materials and Methods
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Literature Cited

Goldfish scales and worm cuticles were submitted to the same cryotechniques before postembedding immunolabeling.

Fish Scale Collagen
The basal plate of the goldfish is composed of thick collagen fibrils (about 100 µm in diameter) organized in superimposed layers parallel to the scale surface and arranged in a plywood-like structure. In each layer, the fibrils are parallel to each other and their direction varies from one layer to the other. In the goldfish basal plate, thin collagen fibrils called TC fibers (Onozato and Watabe 1979 ) perpendicular to the scale surface cross the plywood-like structure. Thick and thin collagen fibrils of the basal plate are synthesized by the hyposquamal scleroblasts that form a continuous layer lining the basal surface of the scales.

Immunogold labeling using pre-embedding procedures was obtained only after disruptive treatments. These treatments disorganized the collagenous network, at least at the surface of the specimens. Only isolated collagen fibrils were decorated with gold particles when antibody against Type I collagen was used (Figure 1). No labeling was observed on the fibrils within the compact collagenous network. The scales that were cryofixed by slam-freezing, cryosubstituted with acetone supplemented with osmium tetroxide, and embedded in Epon showed improved preservation of the cells and of the collagen fibrils, as described elsewhere (Zylberberg and Nicolas 1982 ). However, the immunolabeling of these specimens was not specific, even when osmium tetroxide was omitted during cryosubstitution. Specific labeling was obtained only in cryofixed samples cryosubstituted in acetone either with or without osmium tetroxide and embedded in LR White at both -20°C and 50°C (Figures 2, 3, and 5). The gold particles were distributed over the basal plate on the thick collagen fibrils forming the plywood-like structure and on the thin TC fibers (Figure 2). No labeling was observed in the hyposquamal scleroblasts, which exhibit flat RER saccules (Figure 4). The labeling was not improved in specimens embedded in LR White at low temperature (Figure 5).



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Figure 1. Goldfish scale. Pre-embedding immunolabeling after proteinase K disruptive treatment. Lower part of the basal plate. Note that only the collagen fibrils of the disrupted part are labeled by the gold particles, which do not penetrate within the compact tissue. Original magnification x 50,000. Bar = 200 nm.



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Figures 2-8. Goldfish scale. Postembedding immunolabeling after freeze-substitution in OsO4-acetone, LR White. Type I collagen antibody-protein A-gold (10 nm). Figure 2 Slam-freezing, LR White, 50°C. Gold particles are distributed over the basal plate (bp) on the thick collagen fibrils forming the plywood-like structure and on the thin TC fibrils crossing this structure. Figure 3 Detail of the basal plate. Figure 4 Collagen fibrils decorated with gold particles form the innermost layer of the basal plate (bp) in contact with a hyposquamal scleroblast (hs) containing flat RER saccules (er). m, mitochondrion. Figure 5 Slam-freezing, LR White, -20°C. and Figures 6 and 7 High-pressure freezing. Figure 6 Innermost layer of the basal plate (bp) in contact with the hyposquamal scleroblasts (hs). Figure 7 Detail of the basal plate. Figure 8 Slam-freezing, LR White. Control. Section incubated with nonimmune serum. Original magnifications: Figures 2 and 8 x 30,000; Figures 3, 4, and 7 x 60,000; Figures 5 and 6 x 40,000. Bars = 200 nm.

Scales submitted to high-pressure freezing and then to freeze-substitution in acetone containing osmium tetroxide and embedded in LR White showed a well-preserved collagenous network, the labeling of which did not appear as intense as that obtained after slam-freezing (Figures 6 and 7).

No specific labeling was obtained with sections of goldfish scales that were chemically fixed before cryofixation by slam-freezing, cryosubstitution in acetone with or without osmium tetroxide, and embedding in Epon or in LR White.

No labeling was obtained on control sections submitted to nonimmune rabbit serum (Figure 8) or when the primary antibody was omitted.

Cuticular Collagen
The worm cuticle secreted by the epidermal cells is composed of unbanded fibrils organized in superimposed layers, forming a plywood-like structure that is not as dense as that of the fish scale. The cuticle is crossed by microvilli that arise from the epidermal cells and reach the body surface.

For studying the coastal annelids, all laboratory facilities were available. Therefore, slam-freezing and cryosubstitution, which were known to preserve the ultrastructure and the antigenicity of the tissues (Nicolas 1991 ), were applied on both species, H. lunulata and A. marina. Elytra of H. lunulata were freeze-substituted with acetone-osmium tetroxide and embedded in either LR White or Epon. High specific labeling of the collagenous network was obtained with both resins (Figures 9 and 10). Low-temperature embedding did not improve the intensity of the labeling. Moreover, the labeling of the cuticular collagen was obtained only after a cryosubstitution with osmium tetroxide added to the medium; no labeling was observed after the use of pure acetone. The same results were obtained with A. marina embedded in Epon.



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Figures 9-10. Harmothoe lunulata. Cuticle underlined by epidermal cells (ec) in the elytrum. Slam-freezing, freeze-substitution in OsO4-acetone. co, collagen; mi, microvilli. Figure 9 Epon, cuticular collagen antibody, goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody conjugated to 5-nm gold. Figure 10 Embedding in LR White, cuticular collagen antibody-protein A-gold (10 nm). The collagen network is labeled by abundant gold particles in both cases. Original magnifications: Figure 9 x 60,000; Figure 10 x 30,000. Bars = 200 nm.

Immunolabeling of the cuticular collagen after high-pressure freezing followed by cryosubstitution in acetone-osmium tetroxide and embedding in Epon was tested on the elytra of H. lunulata (Figure 11). With the use of high-pressure freezing, extractions were observed in the ground cytoplasm and the vesicles were swollen, whereas the preservation of the cuticle ultrastructure was improved. However, the immunolabeling did not appear as intense as that obtained with slam-freezing (Figure 9).



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Figure 11. Harmothoe lunulata. Cuticle covering the elytrum. High-pressure freezing, freeze-substitution in OsO4-acetone, embedding in Epon, cuticular collagen antibody-protein A-gold (10 nm). The cuticular structure is very well preserved and specifically labeled. Original magnification x 30,000. Bar = 200 nm.

The specimens of R. pachyptila were cryofixed on shipboard by plunging in liquid propane. Few results were obtained because of the difficulty of reproducing good quality freeze-fixations without specialized devices, and only small, shallow areas appeared to be well preserved. In these areas the collagen fibrils organized in an orthogonal plywood-like structure were well preserved and were labeled with gold particles (Figure 12).



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Figures 12-14. Riftia pachyptila, body cuticle. Figure 12 Propane-plunging, freeze-substitution in OsO4-acetone, embedding in Epon, cuticular collagen antibody-protein A-gold (10 nm). The collagen fibrils (co) labeled with gold particles form a network around the cross-sectioned microvilli (mi). Figures 13 and 14 Chemically fixed and cryoprotected specimens. Figure 13 Slam-freezing. Figure 14 High pressure freezing. In both cases, the gold particles are localized on the collagen fibrils (co), forming a network crossed by the microvilli (mi). ec, epidermal cell. Original magnifications: Figure 12 x 60,000; Figure 13 x 50,000; Figure 14 x 40,000. Bars = 200 nm.

Most of the tissues collected during the cruise were accessible after fixation by aldehydes only, mostly glutaraldehyde, which is known to inhibit immunolabeling reactions. Nevertheless, we carried out immunolabeling techniques after freeze-fixation of these chemically fixed tissues. Slam-freezing (Figure 13) and high-pressure freezing (Figure 14) were used. The samples were freeze-substituted in a medium containing osmium tetroxide and embedded in Epon. The freeze-fixation of chemically pre-fixed and cryoprotected specimens ensures the preservation of a thicker area (about 200 µm with slam-freezing) from the freezing front than that obtained with fresh material without cryoprotection (about 10-15 µm). The high-pressure freezing produced some swelling of the cytoplasmic vesicles, similar to that observed in non-pre-fixed material. The collagenous network was well preserved and abundant gold particles were specifically distributed on the collagen fibrils (Figure 14).

Control sections submitted to the nonimmune rabbit serum or to PBS-BSA-Tween solution were not labeled.

The results are summarized in Table 1. After the slam-freezing method, we tested two cryosubstitution media, pure acetone or acetone-osmium, and the two resins, Epon or LR White. This latter was polymerized at -20°C or 50°C. The use of LR White polymerized at low temperature did not improve the immunolabeling compared to that obtained at 50°C. Therefore, for the other experiments the polymerization was achieved at 50°C. It appeared that the best compromise for characterization of Type I collagen was obtained after cryosubstitution with acetone-osmium and embedding in LR White, whereas for cuticular collagen it was obtained after cryosubstitution in acetone-osmium and embedding either in Epon or LR White.


 
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Table 1. Results obtained after the different procedures useda


  Discussion
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Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

The present study has shown that immunoelectron microscopy of fibrillar collagens in compact tissues is achieved using postembedding labeling after freeze-fixation and freeze-substitution, which also yields good preservation of the spatial architecture of the collagenous network in the worm cuticle and in the fish scale. Previous studies using the same antibodies have shown that postembedding immunolabeling has failed after chemical fixation in worm cuticle (Hamraoui 1994 ) and in fish scales (unpublished results). These results are consistent with the fact generally admitted that conventional techniques--chemical fixations, dehydration, and embedding--produce alterations that lead to masking of the antigen.

In vertebrates, collagen epitopes are highly sensitive to aldehydes contained in the fixatives and particularly to glutaraldehyde, the most successful aldehyde used for electron microscopy (Young et al. 1995 ; Hunziker 1993 ), these aldehydes showing a high affinity for {alpha}-helices (Hayat 1981 ). The formation of intermolecular crosslinks is shown by changes in the staining patterns of the fixed fibrillar collagens (Bairati et al. 1968 ). Cryotechniques offer advantages because they minimize modifications of the morphological features and preserve antigenicity (Hunziker 1993 ). Slam-freezing of fresh worm cuticle and fish scale has succeeded in providing well-preserved structures within the cells as well as in the compact extracellular matrix. High-pressure freezing of fresh tissues has improved the structural preservation of the compact extracellular matrix but not its immunoreactivity, as observed in another extracellular matrix (Nanci et al. 1994 ). It has induced some artifacts in the cell structures, such as swelling of the vesicles and extraction of the ground cytoplasm. Such artifacts were believed to occur during specimen mounting before exposure to high-pressure freezing (Kiss and Staehelin 1995 ).

Fine preservation of the structures as well as intense immunolabeling was obtained when osmium tetroxide was added to acetone, the freeze-substitution medium, although osmium tetroxide is known to destroy antigenicity by protein-protein crosslinking (Newman and Jasani 1984 ; Nielson and Griffith 1979 ). Moreover, osmium tetroxide must be added to the freeze-substitution medium to preserve the antigenicity of the worm cuticular collagen. In our study, we have found that the antigenicity of the compact collagenous network of worm cuticle was also preserved in chemically fixed specimens subsequently freeze-fixed either by slam-freezing or by high-pressure freezing and freeze-substitution. These positive results suggest that the main cause of labeling loss of the worm cuticular collagen is not due to the aldehyde fixation but to the other procedural steps. The dehydration at room temperature might be a disturbing step, as it induces osmotic changes and shrinkage (Oprins et al. 1994 ; Hayat 1970 ). Freeze-substitution, which consists of the withdrawal of water in a solid state, results in a very slow and gentle dehydration, which reduces the possibility of ultrastructural changes to a minimum (Chan et al. 1993 ; Yamashita and Yasuda 1992 ).

In contrast, the immunoreactivity of the Type I collagen of the fish scale was not preserved in samples fixed before freeze-fixation and freeze-substitution. On the other hand, unlike the worm cuticular collagen, which is immunolabeled after embedding in LR White and in Epon, the Type I collagen of fish scale is immunoreactive only in specimens embedded in LR White, a hydrophilic acrylic resin that provides good access to epitopes (Brorson et al. 1994 ; Griffiths 1993 ; Newman and Hobot 1993 ). No labeling was obtained in samples embedded in Epon. This might be explained by the fact that this resin could co-polymerize with the tissue, forming covalent bonds (Kellenberger et al. 1987 ) and hampering immunolabeling.

The failure of labeling of the collagenous network in the fish scales while the worm cuticle remains immunoreactive can be related to the presence of noncollagenous components such as those involved in the mineralization of the fish scales (Zylberberg et al. 1992b ; Zylberberg and Nicolas 1982 ), which prevent access to Type I collagen epitopes. Immunolabeling might also be hampered by the higher compactness of the plywood-like structure in the fish scales than in the cuticle. Alternatively, it is possible that epitopes of the cuticular collagen are less sensitive to aldehydes than those of Type I collagen of vertebrates. Epitopes of the cuticular collagen are not destroyed by chemical fixation and become accessible to antibodies after freeze-fixation and freeze-substitution.

Fixation is considered to be the most important of the many steps involved in the processing of specimens for immunoelectron microscopy (reviewed by Williams and Faulkner 1993 ). Nevertheless, freeze-substitution and embedding appeared to be important also, since the substitution medium and the resin could also prevent the labeling of antigen as observed in the present study.

Our results are consistent with data reporting that cryotechniques are of value for postembedding immunogold labeling in compact connective tissues. However, they are not a standard application (Young et al. 1995 ; Hunziker 1993 ). A compromise between the preservation of ultrastructure and immunoreactivity must be found for each tissue.


  Acknowledgments

This work was supported by grants from the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) URA 1488, UPR 9042, URA 1137.

We are indebted to Dr. Aries Kovoor (Université Paris 7 and CNRS) for the English correction of the manuscript. We also acknowledge the excellent service of the photographic department of the CIME.

Received for publication May 3, 1996; accepted August 15, 1996.


  Literature Cited
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Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
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