Journal of National Fisheries University Volume 72 Issue 3
published_at 2024-03
The term “neutrophilic” and “neutrophilic granule” was first introduced by Paul Ehrlich to identify specific granules of major polymorphonuclear leukocytes (neutrophils). He used an original staining method, triacid stain, for this purpose. The staining solution, called “neutral mixture”, which was mixture of acidic dye solution and basic dye solution, with soluble form in water (not neutral dye). In this paper, we speculate the structure and characteristics of the dye complex in the neutral mixture. The dye complex has free acidic groups and is expected to behave as an acidic dye. The dye complex bound to the neutrophilic granules stains the granules with the color tone of the dye complex (purple) because the acid and basic dyes do not dissociate. On the other hand, in the vicinity of the eosinophilic granules and nucleus, the dye complex dissociates into acid and basic dyes, and the former bind to the acid dye and the latter to the basic dye. It was inferred that this dye complex is not formed during staining with stains containing neutral dyes, such as May-Grünwald (methylene blue eosinate), Wright (polychromtic methylene blue eosinate), and Giamsa (containing azure II eosinate).
Creator Keywords
neutrophilic
neutrophilic granule
triacid stain
Romanowsky stain