首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 562 毫秒
1.
Conventional chemical fixation and paraffin-embedding procedures give good preservation of morphology, although the antigenicity of many proteins in the tissue sample is destroyed. On the other hand, fresh frozen sections can preserve the antigenicity, but provide poor morphological preservation. To overcome this dilemma, cryofixation and freeze drying were used on human skin tissue, applying methodology which has only been used to study lymphoid tissue. First, fresh human skin was cryofixed in liquid isopentane (-160 degrees C) cooled by liquid nitrogen. The skin was then freeze-dried at -40 degrees C and 10(-2) atmospheric pressure for 72 h, followed by embedding in paraffin. Sections 4 microns thick taken from this cryofixed, freeze-dried, and paraffin-embedded skin were stained with hematoxylin-eosin or used for immunolabeling with antibodies against basement membrane antigen, including type IV and type VII collagen, bullous pemphigoid antigen, epidermolysis bullosa acquisita antigen, and GB3 antigen. The morphological preservation of these sections was as good as that of routine formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded skin sections. The basement membrane was clearly immunostained with all antibodies used, and the intensity of the reaction was as strong as that seen in frozen sections. Evaluation of antigen distribution in conjunction with the detailed skin structure was therefore possible in the same sections.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Laminin was demonstrated by immunoperoxidase and immunofluorescence staining in sections of normal human tissues fixed in formalin and routinely processed in paraffin. Exposure of the sections to a solution of pepsin (Burns et al. (1980) Histochemistry 6773–78) revealed the antigenicity of this basement membrane glycoprotein. Sections from paraffin blocks stored for years at room temperature could be stained with this procedure. Normal human tissues, developing fetal tissues and tumors could be stained with this method. The staining patterns were similar to those seen in unfixed frozen sections. It thus appears that basement membrane components can be detected by immunohistological means from routinely processed histological samples, once the sections are pretreated with proteases. Staining for laminin could be used in embryonic studies and in histopathology to study the relation of cells to basement membranes and for the visualization of normal and abnormal vascularization.To whom offprint requests should be sent  相似文献   

3.
Summary J chain can be used as a marker of plasmablasts and plasma cells at an earlier stage than intracellular immunoglobulin. Immunoperoxidase techniques were used to study optimal fixation conditions for the preservation of human J chain antigenicity in paraffin-embedded tissue sections. The most constantly positive staining for J chain combined with good morphological integrity was obtained with Bouin's fluid for 1.5 h at 20°C. All other fixatives studied showed less consistent staining results.Studies supported by the Sigrid Jesélius Foundation  相似文献   

4.
A simple protocol of tissue preparation was sought, which would enable marker enzymes of bone cells and extracellular matrix antigens to be localized in the same tissue section with high optical resolution. For this purpose, snap-frozen samples of rat fetal skeletal tissues were dried in a FDU 010 freeze-drying unit (Balzers) for 8–12 h at –50 to –40°C and 0.02 bar. Freeze-dried tissues were either vacuum-infiltrated at 45°C and embedded undemineralized in Paraplast, or vacuum-infiltrated overnight at 4°C and embedded undemineralized in glycol methacrylate. These procedures enabled enzyme cytochemistry for alkaline phosphatase and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase, and immunocytochemical staining for collagen types I, III, and laminin to be performed on the same sections. No pretreatment of the sections was necessary to reveal collagen antigenicity. This study reveals the possibility of complementing immunocytochemical studies of extracellular matrix with enzyme cytochemistry and, above all, with the excellent tissue preservation and high resolution afforded by plastic embedding.  相似文献   

5.
Summary A method has been developed for the histochemical demonstration of a variety of dehydrogenases in freeze-dried or fixed resin-embedded tissue. Seven dehydrogenases were studied. Lactate dehydrogenase, NADH dehydrogenase and NADPH tetrazolium reductase were all demonstrable in sections of paraformaldehyde-fixed resin-embedded tissue. Freeze-dried specimens were embedded, without fixation, in glycol methacrylate resin or LR Gold resin at either 4°C or –20°C. All the dehydrogenases except succinate dehydrogenase retained their activity in freeze-dried, resin-embedded tissue. Enzyme activity was maximally preserved by embedding the freeze-dried tissue specimens in glycol methacrylate resin at –20°C. The dehydrogenases were accurately localized without any diffusion when the tissue sections were incubated in aqueous media. Addition of a colloid stabilizer to the incubating medium was not required. Freeze-drying combined with low-temperature resin embedding permits accurate enzyme localization without diffusion, maintenance of enzyme activity and excellent tissue morphology.  相似文献   

6.
The loss of antigenicity in archival formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue sections negatively affects both diagnostic histopathology and advanced molecular studies. The mechanisms underlying antigenicity loss in FFPE tissues remain unclear. The authors hypothesize that water is a crucial contributor to protein degradation and decrement of immunoreactivity in FFPE tissues. To test their hypothesis, they examined fixation time, processing time, and humidity of storage environment on protein integrity and antigenicity by immunohistochemistry, Western blotting, and protein extraction. This study revealed that inadequate tissue processing, resulting in retention of endogenous water in tissue sections, results in antigen degradation. Exposure to high humidity during storage results in significant protein degradation and reduced immunoreactivity, and the effects of storage humidity are temperature dependent. Slides stored under vacuum with desiccant do not protect against the effects of residual water from inadequate tissue processing. These results support that the presence of water, both endogenously and exogenously, plays a central role in antigenicity loss. Optimal tissue processing is essential. The parameters of optimal storage of unstained slides remain to be defined, as they are directly affected by preanalytic variables. Nevertheless, minimization of exposure to water is required for antigen preservation in FFPE tissue sections. This article contains online supplemental material at http://www.jhc.org. Please visit this article online to view these materials.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The effects of some alcohol and aldehyde containing fixatives on the antigenicity of human carbonic anhydrase isoenzyme C (HCA C) were tested in order to reveal the most suitable method for the immunohistochemical localization of this enzyme. The use of 2% and 4% paraformaldehyde or 2% glutaraldehyde solutions before immunoperoxidase (PAP) staining resulted in the loss of HCA C-specific reactivity in the surface epithelial cells of human appendicular and gastric mucosae, whereas the antigenic reactivity of HCA C was well retained in the parietal cells of gastric glands. In corresponding tissue sections fixed with one of the alcohol containing solutions (abs. methanol, methanol+chloroform 21 or Carnoy fluid) both the surface epithelial and parietal cells showed HCA C-specific immunostaining after the PAP procedure. In addition, the antigenicity of HCA C was found to be well preserved in some tubular cells of human kidney fixed in Carnoy fluid. The paraffin infiltration at relatively low temperature did not markedly affect the enzyme antigenicity. Fixation in Carnoy fluid coupled with paraffin embedding at 55–60° C in vacuo was found to give the best preservation of the antigenicity of HCA C with good morphological integrity for light microscopical localization.Grant support from the Finnish Culture Foundation  相似文献   

8.
Mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene cause the hereditary disease cystic fibrosis. The most frequent mutant F508 has been shown in vitro to be retained in the endoplasmic reticulum. Ex vivo studies using immunohistochemical labelling in cryofixed skin biopsies have confirmed the mislocalization of F508 CFTR in sweat glands. The purpose of this study was to test CFTR antibodies in paraffin-embedded skin biopsies to take advantage of the superior tissue preservation as compared to cryofixation. A panel of 7 CFTR antibodies was applied to skin sections of healthy controls and of cystic fibrosis patients homozygous for the F508 mutation. Sweat gland labelling consistent with CFTR localization and different between control and cystic fibrosis tissue was obtained with 2 antibodies. Conventional staining controls confirmed the labelling specificity. The antibodies were subsequently tested in a series of 237 sections of 16 biopsy specimens. However, the sweat gland labelling pattern proved not to be dependent on CFTR genotype. This finding was the sole indicator of non-specificity of the staining which was revealed only by the size of our random sample. Our results emphasize that CFTR immunolabelling following formalin fixation has to be interpreted with the utmost caution.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Immunoperoxidase techniques were used to study the preservation of the antigenicity of human lactoferrin (LF) of polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) and various exocrine glandular cells in paraffin-embedded tissue blocks and cytocentrifuged cell smears. Tissues fixed in Carnoy's fluid in contrast to other fixatives used, showed good preservation of LF antigenicity irrespective of the fixation time. Cell smears fixed in Carnoy's fluid showed diffuse nuclear and cytoplasmic staining for LF, although morphologic intergrity was poorly preserved. Granular cytoplasmic staining for LF with no staining of nuclei was seen in cell smears fixed in buffered formol acetone for 2–10 min. The nature of nuclear LF staining and future applications of the present methods are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The difference between paraffin-embedded and frozen skin sections is always questionable. Ten patients of early stage mycosis fungoides, ten patients with psoriasis and ten normal controls were included in this study. Aim of this study is to differentiate between paraffin-embedded and frozen skin sections in inflammatory and malignant dermatoses using synchrotron infrared microspectroscopy (SIRM). It was found that epidermal beta sheets in paraffin-embedded sections were higher in a highly significant manner than frozen sections (P < 0.001). Also, epidermal nucleic acids in paraffin-embedded sections were lower in a highly significant manner than frozen sections (P < 0.001). However, when various skin diseases were compared with the control. It was found that the difference between paraffin-embedded and frozen skin sections were almost similar. In conclusion SIRM is a unique promising diagnostic technique and it seems that frozen processing preserve skin tissue more, this was represented by less apoptosis (beta sheets) and more nucleic acids than paraffin processing. However, there are still many advantages of both approaches over the other depending on the goal of the study.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Perfusion-fixed tissue blocks were incubated in high molar sucrose solutions, shock frozen in melting isopentane, and sectioned on a conventional cryostat. Semithin sections (2–4 m) alternatingly stained for parvalbumin and glutamate decarboxylase enabled us to demonstrate the coexistence of both antigens in the same cell. Thick sections (40 m) of central and peripheral nervous system tissue were immunostained and processed for correlated light and electron microscopic studies. At the electron microscopic level, the preservation of ultrastructural features such as membranes and synaptic contacts was comparable to that normally seen in vibratome sectioned material. Hence, this technique can successfully be used for preembedding coexistence studies and electron microscopic preembedding immunocytochemistry when vibratome sectioning is problematic.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Horseradish peroxidase (HRP), a glycoprotein rich in mannose groups, was used as a ligand to detect receptors for glycoproteins in formalinfixed, frozen sections of rat liver. Specific binding of HRP occurred to surface membranes of sinusoidal cells but not to those of parenchymal cells. The binding sites were visualized after the peroxidatic reaction in erythrocytes had been suppressed by methanol-H2O2 and phenylhydrazine, the latter reagent also decreasing the nonspecific background adsorption of HRP. Several factors influencing the reaction were studied systematically. The specific binding of HRP to sinusoidal cells was greatly decreased or abolished when tissue blocks were fixed for longer than 1–2 h in a cold 4% formaldehyde solution and the frozen sections subsequently treated for 30 min in cold methanol. The specific binding of HRP increased when the concentration of HRP in the medium was increased from 10 g/ml to 40 g/ml, when the time of incubation with HRP was increased from 1 h to 4 h, or when the temperature of incubation with HRP was increased from 4°C to 22°C, or from 22°C to 37°C. The specific binding of HRP also increased when the pH of the incubation medium was increased from 7.0 to 10.0. Little or no specific binding of HRP was observed in the absence of added Ca++. The binding of HRP was suppressed by 10 mM mannose or 0.004% mannan whereas the suppression of the binding reaction by galactose or galactan required 30–40 times higher concentrations.This work was supported by the Morris A. Kaplan Fund  相似文献   

13.
Summary The fixation and drying regimes for frozen sections and cytocentrifuge preparations for the demonstration of surface antigens, such as immunoglobulins and iron binding proteins, vary enormously between different groups of workers. A method using freeze-dried sections and acetone fixation was compared with 16 other methods of fixation and found to be the best for tissue preservation and antigen demonstration. Freeze drying was found to improve the cytological preservation of air-dried sections considerably.  相似文献   

14.
M. Malecki  J. V. Small 《Protoplasma》1987,139(2-3):160-169
Summary Three embedding media have been compared with respect to post-embedding immunolabeling of contractile and cytoskeletal antigens in aldehyde-fixed smooth muscle tissue: the methacrylate derivates lowicryl K4M (cured at –35 or 60°C) and LR White (cured at 0 or 60°C) and the water soluble resin, polyvinylalcohol (dried at 60°C). Measurements of intensity of labeling of ultrathin sections in the fluorescence microscope showed that five antigens (actin, myosin light chain, tropomyosin, filamin and vinculin) reacted more or less equally with their respective antibodies in all the embedding media, including those cured at 60°C. One antibody (anti-light meromyosin) reacted well only with polyvinylalcohol-embedded tissue. In contrast to the relative invariance of antibody reactivity between media clear differences in the preservation of ultrastructural integrity were observed. Embedding in polyvinylalcohol (dried at 60°C) and in Lowicryl (cured at –35°C) resulted in superior preservation as compared to Lowicryl or LR White cured at 60°C. Examples of uitrastructural immunocytochemistry with the antibodies against filamin and myosin light chain, using the immunogold staining procedure are presented: the sites of localization by these antibodies were the same with all the media tried. The relative merits of the different methods are discussed.Abbreviations EGTA Ethyleneglycol-bis(-amino ethyl ether)N,N,N,N-tetra acetic acid - PIPES 1,4-Piperazinediethanesulfonic acid - LR London Resin  相似文献   

15.
Summary Mouse thyroids were preserved for electron microscopy by means of freeze-drying. The tissue specimens were frozen in liquid isopentane, dried at a temperature of –79° C to a pressure of 4×10-5 mm Hg, stained in vacuo with osmium tetroxide vapour at room temperature, and embedded in vacuo in Epon or Vestopal W.The ultrastructure of the freeze-dried thyroid gland was found to be fundamentally similar to that observed after ordinary chemical fixation. However, some differences were noticed. Thus the plasma membrane of the lateral cell surfaces appeared to be asymmetrical, its inner dense layer being thicker than the outer one. The mitochondria had a finely undulating contour and a matrix of rather high density. The mitochondrial outer and inner membranes appeared as five-layered structures and comprised three dense and two less dense layers. Small dense granules with an undulating outline and larger, less dense granules with a distinct surface membrane were observed. The intra-cisternal space had a lower density than the extra-cisternal space. 150 Å particles occurred very sparsely. The karyoplasm had a low density and the particulate component of the nucleus was rather scanty. By means of pores in the nuclear envelope the karyoplasm appeared to communicate with the extra-cisternal space. No basement membranes were observed. The appearance of myelin sheaths in freeze-dried specimens seemed to agree well with the picture after chemical fixation.  相似文献   

16.
Summary In situ hybridization was mainly used for typing human papillomavirus (HPV) in paraffin-embedded or frozen sections under stringent conditions (SC). We tested 5 different conditions of stringency with biotinylated HPV 1, 2, 16 and 18 probes on 3 cell lines (Siha and CaSki with HPV16, HeLa with HPV18) by varying the concentration of formamide in the hybridization mixture and washings in order to determine the stringency conditions to be used to assess the presence of HPV and its typing: A-low stringency, hybridization at 35° C below the melting temperature of DNA (Tm-35° C) and washings without formamide; B-low stringency, hybridization and washings at Tm-35° C; C-medium stringency, hybridization at Tm-35° C and washings at Tm-12° C; D-high stringency, hybridization at Tm-12° C and washing without formamide; E-very high stringency, hybridization and washings at –12° C. This study showed that HPV typing required a high stringency. On the contrary, under non stringent conditions (NSC), each cell line was positive with the heterologous probes.When 3 to 5 stringency conditions were assayed on 4 frozen samples, similar results were obtained. Typing required high stringency conditions whereas NSC allowed HPV detection. Furthermore, this study demonstrated the specificity of the reaction in lesions positive with more than one type.Stringent (Tm-12° C) and non stringent (Tm-35° C) conditions of hybridization were further applied to 57 biopsy sections (17 frozen and 40 paraffin-embedded specimens) from typical wart lesions and lesions suspected of HPV. Nineteen samples were totally negative under both NSC and SC, and considered as non-infected by HPV. In 22 specimens positive, under both NSC and stringent conditions (SC), the HPV type was identified. Ten specimens reacted with 1, 2 or 3 HPV types under NSC but the HPV DNA was not typed with the probes used. Six lesions were negative under NSC but were typed under SC. Most paraffin sections were labeled only with one HPV probe under NSC, whereas frozen sections were often labeled with 2 or 3 HPV probes. The HPV probe positive under SC was usually positive under NSC in both frozen and paraffin sections. HPV type 1 probe was more frequently positive under NSC in paraffin- embedded sections than the others and the 4 probes tested were equally positive in frozen sections.These findings show the interest of in situ hybridization in low stringency conditions since 17% of our lesions (10/57) were positive only under NSC: HPV DNA was detected but not typed with the probes used. Frozen sections were more frequently positive than paraffin sections, suggesting a loss of DNA accessibility in the latter, due to the fixation or processing before hybridization.  相似文献   

17.
Summary A new technique is described to prepare plant material for electron probe analysis. Root segments 1 mm in length were frozen at-170°, freeze-substituted with anhydrous ether at-30° and infiltrated with Spurr's low-viscosity epoxy resin embedding medium at low temperatures. Sections 1 and 2 thick were cut anhydrously using hexylene glycol in the ultramicrotome trough, mounted on the polished surface of a Be disc and vacuum coated with 150–200 Å aluminum.The new technique allows retention of water-soluble ions at the original sites in the tissue and is superior to cryostat sectioning in spatial resolution of electron probe analysis and in the preservation of cellular structures.The lateral transport of K+ into the xylem of corn roots has been successfully studied by electron probe analysis of freeze-substituted, epoxy resin embedded material.  相似文献   

18.
Summary This work describes a method for the immunolocalization of laminin on 1m-thick tissue sections using a postembedding immunofluorescence technique. Embedding of unfixed or formaldehyde-fixed mouse renal cortex in either of the acrylic resins LR-White or LR-Gold permitted reliable postembedding immunofluorescence staining for laminin. LR-White was heat-cured at 50°C whereas LR-Gold was polymerized at –25°C. A stronger immunostaining for laminin was obtained from tissue embedded in polymerized LR-Gold compared with the staining from tissue embedded in LR-White. Prerequisites for adequate postembedding immunostaining are the partial dehydration of the tissue (maximum ethanol concentration, 70%) and pepsin treatment of the tissue sections prior to performing the immunostaining reactions.  相似文献   

19.
Summary We describe the preparation of monoclonal antibodies to nuclear antigens in the green alga,Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and their localization at the light and electron microscope level. Supernatants from hybridomas were screened by the ELISA method and the four antibodies giving the strongest signal were subjected to further analysis. At the LM level immunogold silver staining was used on semi-thick resinless sections. We have examined at the EM level the distribution of these antigens by post-embedding immunocytochemical techniques on sections of conventionally fixed specimens compared to cryofixed and freeze-substituted ones. Enhanced ultrastructural preservation was observed in cells which were cryofixed, freeze-substituted and embedded at –35°C in Lowicryl K4M. Different preparative procedures involving cryofixation and substitution are described. Of the four antibodies three were localized under light and electron microscopy. All three were distributed in the interchromatin space. One of these antigens (QUL4D2, 54 kDa) is also found in the dense fibrillar component and fibrillar centers of the nucleolus.Abbreviations DFC dense fibrillar component - EM electron microscope - FC fibrillar center - GAM5 goat anti-mouse IgM coupled to 5 nm colloidal gold - Ig immunoglobulin - LM light microscope - MAb monoclonal antibody - PAG protein A-gold - PBS phosphate buffered saline - PEG polyethylene glycol  相似文献   

20.
An enzyme immunoassay, using finely ground rabbit glomerular basement membrane (GBM) as an antigen, was able to detect sheep anti-rabbit GBM antibodies at serum dilutions of 132 000. The particulate GBM bound firmly to plastic micro ELISA plates without the aid of a linking agent, and the antigen-coated plates remained stable for several months when stored at –70°C. There were no appreciable differences between amino acid compositions of ground and whole GBM, and no detectable loss of antigens occurred during the grinding procedure. Competitive inhibition assays ,with collagenase and pepsin digests of rabbit GBM demonstrated preservation of collagenous and non-collagenous antigens in the ground GBM. The assay should prove to be a relatively simple and highly sensitive technique for detecting antibodies to a wide spectrum of GBM antigens.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号