Quantitative histochemistry of mucosubstance in tracheal epithelium of the macaque monkey.

Abstract
Experimentally applied irritants and chronic respiratory diseases appear to alter the amount and composition of secretory cell product in surface epithelium and submucosal glands of pulmonary airways. Previous methods used to quantify these changes have been very time-consuming or have not measured the same components of the airway wall. The present study describes a rapid, reproducible, and standardized automated method for quantifying secretory products. The tracheas from eight macaque monkeys were fixed with glutaraldehyde-paraformaldehyde, embedded in glycol methacrylate, serially sectioned at 2 microns, and histochemically stained to demonstrate neutral, sialylated, and sulfated mucosubstances in the cartilaginous, intercartilaginous, and membranous regions of both proximal and distal trachea. Volume densities were determined using an image analyzer and are expressed as volume of stained mucosubstance per unit surface area of epithelial basal lamina. Comparison of the automated method to manual point counting and evaluation of internal variance showed that the automated method had a twelve-fold increase in efficiency with no significant differences in measurements. After weighting the values of each region according to their anatomical contribution, the total secretory product (TSP) for the entire trachea was determined. Periodate-reactive acid material predominated (73%) in luminal surface epithelium, and neutral material predominated (78%) in submucosal glands. Surface epithelium contained 66% of the TSP. The greater contribution by surface epithelium and predominance of acid mucins there resulted in a TSP from the trachea that consisted of 59% acid material (most of which was sulfated) and 41% neutral material. The method proved to be a valid, reproducible, and rapid technique for evaluating variability in abundance of mucosubstances within airway epithelium.