Hematoxylin and Eosin Staining of Tissue and Cell Sections
Institute of Cell Biology and Neurobiology
Abstract
INTRODUCTIONHematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stains have been used for at least a century and are still essential for recognizing various tissue types and the morphologic changes that form the basis of contemporary cancer diagnosis. The stain has been unchanged for many years because it works well with a variety of fixatives and displays a broad range of cytoplasmic, nuclear, and extracellular matrix features. Hematoxylin has a deep blue-purple color and stains nucleic acids by a complex, incompletely understood reaction. Eosin is pink and stains proteins nonspecifically. In a typical tissue, nuclei are stained blue, whereas the cytoplasm and extracellular matrix have varying degrees of pink staining. Well-fixed…
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4Topics & keywords
- H&E stain
- Staining
- Stain
- Eosin
- Chemistry
- Cytoplasm
- Pathology
- Molecular biology