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Coloration à l'alizarine rouge×Coloration au rouge Picrosirius×
DomaineBiomatériauxBiomatériaux
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine20041978
Auteur d'origineGregory, Gunn, PeisterJunqueira, Bignolas, Brentani
TypeStaining assayStaining assay
Source fondatriceGregory, C. A., Gunn, W. G., Peister, A., & Prockop, D. J. (2004). An Alizarin red-based assay of mineralization by adherent cells in culture: comparison with cetylpyridinium chloride extraction. Analytical Biochemistry, 329(1), 77-84. DOI ↗Junqueira, L. C. U., Bignolas, G., & Brentani, R. R. (1978). Picrosirius staining plus polarization microscopy, a specific method for collagen detection in tissue sections. Histochemical Journal, 11(4), 447-455. DOI ↗
Aliasalizarin red-S, calcium staining, bone mineralization assaysirius red, collagen staining, fibrillar collagen assay
Apparentées44
RésuméAlizarin red-S (1,2-dihydroxyanthraquinone-3-sulfonic acid) is a calcium-binding dye that forms a colored complex with mineralized deposits, enabling direct visualization and quantification of bone matrix mineralization. Developed as a standard assay by Gregory and colleagues in 2004, alizarin red staining is widely used to evaluate osteogenic differentiation of stem cells, assess the mineralization-promoting effects of biomaterial scaffolds and growth factors, and measure the calcium content of bone tissue and engineered constructs. The assay is rapid, quantitative, and provides both visual and colorimetric readout.Picrosirius red (acid red 80) is a direct dye for collagen that binds specifically to the triple helix structure of fibrillar collagens and allows direct visualization and quantification under light and polarized light microscopy. Introduced by Junqueira and colleagues in 1978, picrosirius red staining has become the gold standard for assessing collagen deposition and organization in tissue sections, scaffolds, and cell cultures. The key advantage is that picrosirius red-stained collagen exhibits birefringence under polarized light, enabling researchers to visualize not only the amount of collagen but also its degree of organization and fibril maturity—information crucial for evaluating bone, cartilage, skin, and tendon engineering.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Alizarin Red Staining · Picrosirius Red Staining. Consulté le 2026-06-19 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare