Summary
Tissue proteins believed to contain a relatively high concentration of C-terminal carboxyl groups emit an intense blue fluorescence after being treated with first a hot mixture of acetic anhydride and pyridine, second salicylhydrazide and last zinc acetate. Characteristically they do not fluoresce when the zinc treatment is omitted. Muscular tissues emit the strongest fluorescence, but normally neither mucosubstances nor loose connective tissues fluoresce at all.
These and other results are consistent with Barrnett and Seligman's view that acetic anhydride in the presence of hot pyridine transforms the C-terminal carboxyl groups of proteins into methyl ketones. They do not support Karnovsky's more recent theory that hot acetic anhydride more or less exclusively converts side-chain carboxyl groups of proteins into mixed acid anhydrides instead.
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Stoward, P.J., Burns, J. Studies in fluorescence histochemistry. Histochemie 10, 230–233 (1967). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00304870
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00304870