English: Colonic crypts (
intestinal glands) within four tissue sections. The cells have been stained by
immunohistochemistry to show a brown-orange color if the cells produce the
mitochondrial protein
Cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (CCOI), and the
nuclei of the cells (located at the outer edges of the cells lining the walls of the crypts) are stained blue-gray with
haematoxylin. Panels A, B were cut across the long axes of the crypts and panels C, D were cut parallel to the long axes of the crypts. In panel A the bar shows 100 µm and allows an estimate of the frequency of crypts in the colonic epithelium. Panel B includes three crypts in cross-section, each with one segment deficient for CCOI expression and at least one crypt, on the right side, undergoing fission into two crypts. Panel C shows, on the left side, a crypt fissioning into two crypts. Panel D shows typical small clusters of two and three CCOI deficient crypts (the bar shows 50 µm). The images were made from original photomicrographs, but panels A, B and D were also included in an article
[1] and illustrations were published with Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial License allowing re-use.