With a new technique of negative staining of sections, it has been possible to observe directly, in ultrathin sections under the electron microscope, the original microcrystalline and microfibrillar structure of cellulose as it occurs in living cells. This method has advantages over the study of isolated fibers used so far by others, in that the original arrangement of microfibrils is better preserved, and their collapse into larger fibrillar units is prevented. With this method, the cell walls of ramie, jute, and cotton fibers have been studied. The size (diameter, 25 to 40 A) and the longitudinal periodicity observed in the single microfibrils and the orientation and spatial arrangement of the microcrystallite within the microfibrils are found to correspond with the latest models derived by others from data obtained by indirect methods such as X-ray diffraction. The microfibril size of about 35 A, found by measuring these structures in sections, agrees with the latest conclusions reached by others in recent work with isolated fibrils.
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1 May 1966
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May 01 1966
THE MICROCRYSTALLINE STRUCTURE OF CELLULOSE IN CELL WALLS OF COTTON, RAMIE, AND JUTE FIBERS AS REVEALED BY NEGATIVE STAINING OF SECTIONS
A. N. J. Heyn
A. N. J. Heyn
From the Department of Biology, Louisiana State University, New Orleans
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A. N. J. Heyn
From the Department of Biology, Louisiana State University, New Orleans
Received:
July 06 1965
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
1966
J Cell Biol (1966) 29 (2): 181–197.
Article history
Received:
July 06 1965
Citation
A. N. J. Heyn; THE MICROCRYSTALLINE STRUCTURE OF CELLULOSE IN CELL WALLS OF COTTON, RAMIE, AND JUTE FIBERS AS REVEALED BY NEGATIVE STAINING OF SECTIONS . J Cell Biol 1 May 1966; 29 (2): 181–197. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.29.2.181
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