One minute with Google turned up this reference.  
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC380951/pdf/applmicro00058-0151.pdf 
It will have been cited by many other papers. Your pathologist boss should be 
able to find them on a cited reference search web site. The best ones are Web 
of Science and Scopus, available through libraries. Google Scholar (free for 
anyone) is also good, but it's slower, less organized, and may show local items 
with ads at the top of the heap and the good stuff a bit further down. Probably 
there are programs for veterinary literature searches. A veterinary pathologist 
should know.
 
John Kiernan 
Anatomy, UWO 
London, Canada 
= = = 
 On 01/12/11, "Weaver, Stephanie" <swea...@tvmdl.tamu.edu> wrote:

> 
> Dear Histonetters:
> 
> One of my pathologists is seeking a method to identify and speciate 
> Prototheca in fixed animal tissues.  I can't seem to find anyone that does 
> this.  Any ideas?
> 
> Stephanie Weaver
> Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory
> 
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> Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
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> 
> 

 
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