posted on 2011-05-31, 00:09authored byYu-An Cao, Sophie Kusy, Richard Luong, Ronald J. Wong, David K. Stevenson, Christopher H. Contag
<p>(A) H&E staining of the spleen sections from <i>hmox</i><sup>+/+</sup> or <i>hmox</i><sup>+/−</sup> cell recipients at day 14 post-transplantation is shown. The arrows indicate hemosiderin-laden macrophages. The transplantation of HO-1-deficient BM cells leads to an increase of hemosiderin. The magnification is 400×. The photograph shown is a representative of three experiments. (B) Prussian blue iron staining of the spleen sections from <i>hmox</i><sup>+/+</sup> or <i>hmox</i><sup>+/−</sup> cell recipients at day 14 post-transplantation is shown. The transplantation of HO-1-deficient BM cells leads to an increase of Prussian blue-positive cells. The magnification is 100×. The photograph shown is a representative experiment out of the three that were performed. (C) The total and free iron levels in the splenic homogenates from <i>hmox</i><sup>+/+</sup> or <i>hmox</i><sup>+/−</sup> cell recipients at day 14 post-transplantation are shown. The transplantation of HO-1-deficient BM cells leads to a decrease of soluble iron. The mean ± SEM is shown for six mice per genotype; *P≤0.05.</p>