Methacrylate: An alternative fixing agent for identifying the botanical origin of propolis

Premise A new technique was developed to identify the botanical origin of propolis, a resin‐like material made by bees by mixing saliva and beeswax with plant buds and exudates, using methacrylate for permanent slide preparation. Methods and Results Propolis samples were fixed in methacrylate to pro...

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Main Authors: Érica W. Teixeira, Dejair Message, Renata M. S. A. Meira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-12-01
Series:Applications in Plant Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/aps3.11309
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spelling doaj-dcc13dc02f024074b02333eadbd100e22020-11-25T01:38:24ZengWileyApplications in Plant Sciences2168-04502019-12-01712n/an/a10.1002/aps3.11309Methacrylate: An alternative fixing agent for identifying the botanical origin of propolisÉrica W. Teixeira0Dejair Message1Renata M. S. A. Meira2Honey Bee Health Specialized Laboratory Biological Institute São Paulo State Agribusiness Technology Agency Av. Prof. Manoel César Ribeiro 1920, Pindamonhangaba São Paulo 12411‐010 BrazilDepartment of Animal Science Federal Rural University of the Semiarid Km 47‐BR110, Mossoró Rio Grande do Norte 59625‐900 BrazilDepartment of Plant Biology Federal University of Viçosa Av. Peter Henry Rolfs s/n Viçosa Minas Gerais 36571‐000 BrazilPremise A new technique was developed to identify the botanical origin of propolis, a resin‐like material made by bees by mixing saliva and beeswax with plant buds and exudates, using methacrylate for permanent slide preparation. Methods and Results Propolis samples were fixed in methacrylate to produce permanent slides. The anatomical structures of the plant fragments in the methacrylated propolis were compared with propolis slides prepared using conventional techniques that consist of propolis sediment obtained during a series of solvent reactions, filtration, and centrifugations, which cost a similar amount to produce. The techniques resulted in qualitative differences between the slides obtained. The methacrylated propolis sections allowed the detailed observation and identification of plant anatomical structures that were obscured in samples prepared using the conventional procedure. This clarity enabled the detailed evaluation of valuable taxon‐diagnostic characters in a permanent slide, which can also be used for histochemical tests. Conclusions The methacrylated embedding of propolis is an affordable technique that could be implemented as a routine laboratory procedure. This new technique enables the efficient determination of the botanical origin of propolis.https://doi.org/10.1002/aps3.11309Apis melliferabotanical compositionhistoresinplant fragment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Érica W. Teixeira
Dejair Message
Renata M. S. A. Meira
spellingShingle Érica W. Teixeira
Dejair Message
Renata M. S. A. Meira
Methacrylate: An alternative fixing agent for identifying the botanical origin of propolis
Applications in Plant Sciences
Apis mellifera
botanical composition
historesin
plant fragment
author_facet Érica W. Teixeira
Dejair Message
Renata M. S. A. Meira
author_sort Érica W. Teixeira
title Methacrylate: An alternative fixing agent for identifying the botanical origin of propolis
title_short Methacrylate: An alternative fixing agent for identifying the botanical origin of propolis
title_full Methacrylate: An alternative fixing agent for identifying the botanical origin of propolis
title_fullStr Methacrylate: An alternative fixing agent for identifying the botanical origin of propolis
title_full_unstemmed Methacrylate: An alternative fixing agent for identifying the botanical origin of propolis
title_sort methacrylate: an alternative fixing agent for identifying the botanical origin of propolis
publisher Wiley
series Applications in Plant Sciences
issn 2168-0450
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Premise A new technique was developed to identify the botanical origin of propolis, a resin‐like material made by bees by mixing saliva and beeswax with plant buds and exudates, using methacrylate for permanent slide preparation. Methods and Results Propolis samples were fixed in methacrylate to produce permanent slides. The anatomical structures of the plant fragments in the methacrylated propolis were compared with propolis slides prepared using conventional techniques that consist of propolis sediment obtained during a series of solvent reactions, filtration, and centrifugations, which cost a similar amount to produce. The techniques resulted in qualitative differences between the slides obtained. The methacrylated propolis sections allowed the detailed observation and identification of plant anatomical structures that were obscured in samples prepared using the conventional procedure. This clarity enabled the detailed evaluation of valuable taxon‐diagnostic characters in a permanent slide, which can also be used for histochemical tests. Conclusions The methacrylated embedding of propolis is an affordable technique that could be implemented as a routine laboratory procedure. This new technique enables the efficient determination of the botanical origin of propolis.
topic Apis mellifera
botanical composition
historesin
plant fragment
url https://doi.org/10.1002/aps3.11309
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