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1.
Immunohistochemical staining of tissues is a powerful tool used to delineate the presence or absence of an antigen. During the last 30 years, antigen visualization in human brain tissue has been significantly limited by the masking effect of fixatives. In the present study, we have used a new method for antigen retrieval in formalin-fixed human brain tissue and examined the effectiveness of this protocol to reveal masked antigens in tissues with both short and long formalin fixation times. This new method, which is based on the use of citraconic acid, has not been previously utilized in brain tissue although it has been employed in various other tissues such as tonsil, ovary, skin, lymph node, stomach, breast, colon, lung and thymus. Thus, we reported here a novel method to carry out immunohistochemical studies in free-floating human brain sections. Since fixation of brain tissue specimens in formaldehyde is a commonly method used in brain banks, this new antigen retrieval method could facilitate immunohistochemical studies of brains with prolonged formalin fixation times.  相似文献   

2.
p53 is the most frequently altered tumor-suppressor gene in skin cancer. In normal tissues the p53 protein (wild type) has a very short half-life and it is not detectable immunohistochemically. In contrast, the mutant p53 protein has an extended half-life in tumor cells and can be detected by immunohistochemical methods. p53 is widely used as an indicator of tumor aggression and progression. Fixation methods especially formaldehyde based fixation may mask the immunohistochemical detection of p53 protein but antigen retrieval methods enhance the inmmunohistochemical detection of p53 protein by remodification of protein structure. This study was designed to evaluate the efficacy of different fixatives, of microwaving and microwave pretreatment method to retrieve p53 immunoreactivity in paraffin-embedded non-lesioned (adjacent normal tissue) human skin samples or pathological human skin samples diagnosed as basal cell carcinoma. The samples were fixed at RT and/or in microwave oven either in neutral buffered formalin or alcohol for different time periods. For antigen retrieval, the sections were irradiated in a microwave oven for 5 cycles in 10 mM citrate buffer (pH 6.00). In this study the effects of six different fixation methods on the immunohistochemical staining have been investigated in basal cell tumor specimens. The application of antigen retrieval method was also examined and compared. Optimal results were obtained using samples fixed in alcohol either at room temperature (24 h) or in microwave oven.  相似文献   

3.
Formalin is a commonly used fixative for tissue preservation in pathology laboratories. A major adverse effect of this fixative is the concealing of tissue antigens by protein cross-linking. To achieve a universal antigen retrieval method for immunohistochemistry under a constant condition, we developed a new method in which the effects of formalin fixation were reversed with citraconic anhydride (a reversible protein cross-linking agent) plus heating. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues from various organs were examined for immunohistochemical localization of a wide variety of antigens. Deparaffinized tissue sections were placed in an electric kitchen pot containing 0.05% citraconic anhydride solution, pH 7.4, and the pot was set at "keep warm" temperature mode of 98C for 45 min. This mode allowed heating the sections at a constant temperature. The sections were then washed in buffer solution and immunostained using a labeled streptavidin-biotin method using an automated stainer. In general, formalin-fixed tissues demonstrated specific immunostainings comparable to that in fresh frozen tissues and significantly more enhanced than after conventional antigen retrieval methods. In particular, even difficult-to-detect antigens such as CD4, cyclin D1, granzyme beta, bcl-6, CD25, and lambda chain revealed distinct immunostainings. Different classes of antigens such as cellular markers and receptors, as well as cytoplasmic and nuclear proteins, consistently produced enhanced reactions. This method provides efficient antigen retrieval for successful immunostaining of a wide variety of antigens under an optimized condition. It also allows standardization of immunohistochemistry for formalin-fixed tissues in pathology laboratories, eliminating inter-laboratory discrepancies in results for accurate clinical and research studies.  相似文献   

4.
An alcohol-based non-crosslinking tissue fixative, PAXgene Tissue System, has been proposed as alternative fixation method to formalin, providing superior and morphological preservation. To date, metabolites have not been assessed in PAXgene-fixed tissues. The study focuses on a comparison between PAXgene and standard formalin fixation for metabolomic analysis by MALDI mass spectrometry imaging. Therefore, fifty-six samples from seven mice organs were fixed with PAXgene (PFPE) or formalin (FFPE), embedded in paraffin, and processed to a tissue microarray. PAXgene was able to spatially preserve metabolites in organs achieving an overlap of common metabolites ranging from 34 to 78% with FFPE. Highly similar signal intensities and visualization of molecules demonstrated negligible differences for metabolite imaging on PFPE compared to FFPE tissues. In addition, we performed proteomic analysis of intact proteins and peptides derived from enzymatic digestion. An overlap of 33 to 58% was found between FFPE and PFPE tissue samples in peptide analysis with a higher number of PFPE-specific peaks. Analysis of intact proteins achieved an overlap in the range of 0 to 28% owing to the poor detectability of cross-linked proteins in formalin-fixed tissues. Furthermore, metabolite and peptide profiles obtained from PFPE tissues were able to correctly classify organs independent of the fixation method, whereas a distinction of organs by protein profiles was only achieved by PAXgene fixation. Finally, we applied MALDI MSI to human biopsies by sequentially analyzing metabolites and peptides within the same tissue section. Concerning prospective studies, PAXgene can be used as an alternative fixative for multi-omic tissue analysis.  相似文献   

5.
Since the introduction of the fluorescence-labeled antibody method by Coons et al. [Immunological properties of antibody containing a fluorescent group. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med 47, 200-2002], many immunohistochemical methods have been refined to obtain high sensitivity with low background staining at both light and electron microscopic levels. Heat-induced antigen retrieval (HIAR) reported by Shi et al. in the early 1990s has greatly contributed to immunohistochemical analysis for formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) materials, particularly in the field of pathology. Although antigen retrieval techniques including enzyme digestion, treatment with protein denaturants and heating have been considered tricky and mysterious techniques, the mechanisms of HIAR have been rapidly elucidated. Heating cleaves crosslinks (methylene bridges) and add methylol groups in formaldehyde-fixed proteins and nucleic acids and extends polypeptides to unmask epitopes hidden in the inner portion of antigens or covered by adjacent macromolecules. In buffers having an appropriate pH and ion concentration, epitopes are exposed without entangling the extended polypeptides during cooling process, since polypeptides may strike a balance between hydrophobic attraction force and electrostatic repulsion force. Recent studies have demonstrated that HIAR is applicable for immunohistochemistry with various kinds of specimens, i.e., FFPE materials, frozen sections, plastic-embedded specimens, and physically fixed tissues at both the light- and electron-microscopic levels, and have suggested that the mechanism of HIAR is common to aldehyde-fixed and aldehyde-unfixed materials. Furthermore, heating has been shown to be effective for flow cytometry, nucleic acid histochemistry (fluorescein in situ hybridization (FISH), in situ hybridization (ISH), and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated nick labeling (TUNEL)), and extraction and analysis of macromolecules in both FFPE archive materials and specimens processed by other procedures. In this article, we review mechanism of HIAR and application of heating in both immunohistochemistry and other histochemical reactions.  相似文献   

6.
Antigen retrieval (AR) is a technique that re-exposes epitopes in formalin fixed, paraffin embedded sections and makes them detectable by immunohistochemistry. We compared the effects of two AR procedures, enzyme digestion and microwave heating, on immunostaining of vimentin and desmin in formalin fixed, paraffin embedded tissues. Our results showed that AR is necessary for vimentin and desmin immunostaining in tissues fixed in formalin for more than 48 h. With prolonged fixation times, microwave heating showed better results than enzyme digestion for AR. The same results were obtained using 1% zinc sulfate or Citra Plus solution as retrieval solutions for microwave heating. We recommend microwave heating for AR, because it is easier to use and produces better results compared to enzyme treatment.  相似文献   

7.
Antigen retrieval (AR) is a technique that re-exposes epitopes in formalin fixed, paraffin embedded sections and makes them detectable by immunohistochemistry. We compared the effects of two AR procedures, enzyme digestion and microwave heating, on immunostaining of vimentin and desmin in formalin fixed, paraffin embedded tissues. Our results showed that AR is necessary for vimentin and desmin immunostaining in tissues fixed in formalin for more than 48 h. With prolonged fixation times, microwave heating showed better results than enzyme digestion for AR. The same results were obtained using 1% zinc sulfate or Citra Plus solution as retrieval solutions for microwave heating. We recommend microwave heating for AR, because it is easier to use and produces better results compared to enzyme treatment.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Abstract

Fixation with formaldehyde is the first process to which most biopsy and necropsy specimens are exposed prior to dehydration and embedding in paraffin wax. Tissue specimens that have been fixed in formaldehyde have architectural characteristics that are familiar to virtually every pathologist and these facilitate routine diagnosis. Nevertheless, formaldehyde fixation has some deleterious effects including reduction in immunoreactivity and degradation of nucleic acids. Development of methods to counteract these deleterious effects requires an understanding of the chemical events that occur during tissue fixation and subsequent tissue processing. This short review illustrates some of the chemical consequences of formaldehyde fixation and ethanol dehydration. It also provides some insight into the molecular events accompanying heat-induced antigen retrieval.  相似文献   

10.
Of all molecular aspects lost and recovered during formalin fixation and antigen retrieval, respectively, electrostatic charges have probably received the least attention. This review will focus on our work during the past 7 years. It strongly supports the tenet that electrostatic charges, i.e., net negative on antigens and net positive on antibodies, play an important part in immune reactions and therefore should be given greater attention when focusing on quality control in immunohistochemistry.  相似文献   

11.
Formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissues represent the vast majority of archived tissue. Access to such tissue specimens via shotgun-based proteomic analyses may open new avenues for both prospective and retrospective translational research. In this study, we evaluate the effects of fixation time on antigen retrieval for the purposes of shotgun proteomics. For the first time, we demonstrate the capability of a capillary isotachophoresis (CITP)-based proteomic platform for the shotgun proteomic analysis of proteins recovered from FFPE tissues. In comparison to our previous studies utilizing capillary isoelectric focusing, the CITP-based analysis is more robust and increases proteome coverage. In this case, results from three FFPE liver tissues yield a total of 4098 distinct Swiss-Prot identifications at a 1% false-discovery rate. To judge the accuracy of these assignments, immunohistochemistry is performed on a panel of 17 commonly assayed proteins. These proteins span a wide range of protein abundances as inferred from relative quantitation via spectral counting. Among the panel were 4 proteins identified by a single peptide hit, including three clusters of differentiation (CD) markers: CD74, CD117, and CD45. Because single peptide hits are often regarded with skepticism, it is notable that all proteins tested by IHC stained positive.  相似文献   

12.
We describe the effects of tissue preservation, fixation time, and hydrolytic treatment on the detection of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) by immunoperoxidase staining with three commercial anti-PCNA antibodies (19A2, 19F4, PC10). Our goal was to provide guidelines for PCNA immunohistochemistry in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens. In proliferative cell compartments, nuclear staining was achieved with all three antibodies. In some cases PCNA was also expressed in non-proliferative, histologically normal tissues associated with tumors or other lesions elsewhere. In most autopsy specimens PNCA immunoreactivity was markedly diminished as compared with similar surgical specimens. Incubation overnight with primary antibody at 4 degrees C enhanced PCNA immunoreactivity over incubation at 42 degrees C for 45 min. Pre-treatment with 2 N HCl did not increase staining. Staining with the PC10 antibody was much better preserved than staining with the antibodies 19A2 and 19F4 after prolonged formalin fixation of surgical specimens and in tissues obtained at autopsy. With all three antibodies, however, PCNA immunoreactivity was well preserved during formalin fixation for 8-24 hr and during fixation delays for 8 hr at room temperature. This indicates that PCNA is stable under conditions routinely encountered in diagnostic surgical pathology and facilitates its potential use as a diagnostic proliferation marker.  相似文献   

13.
Picro-Sirius red is a routine diagnostic stain intended for the histological visualization of collagen fibers (fibrosis) in tissue. Multi-label immunohistochemistry is a powerful tool used by researchers to visualize different cell types and their location within a tissue specimen, and to observe co-localization of antigens. Combining the specificity of immunodetection with the simplicity of Sirius red staining will allow researchers to visualize multi-antigen detection in relation to fibrosis, a common histological feature of injury in many chronic diseases. Pre-treatment of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue (FFPE) specimens with antigen retrieval is essential for the work-up of most commercially available antibodies. The most common form of antigen retrieval involves boiling tissue specimens in buffer to break the cross-linkages caused by formalin fixation. However, this method causes tissue modification and collagen fiber shrinkage leading to suboptimal results when counterstaining for Sirius red. Reduced heat and enzymatic digestion are antigen retrieval methods compatible with Sirius red counterstaining. This paper will discuss the difficulties faced when combining these two staining methods, and provide a detailed method for the simultaneous detection of antigen and Sirius red in FFPE tissues.  相似文献   

14.
A novel protocol for antigen retrieval (AR) for immunohistochemistry (IHC) of retinoblastoma protein (pRB) in formalin fixed, paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissue sections was developed using 0.05% citraconic anhydride as the AR solution for heat treatment based on comparison of different methods. This new protocol has advantages including superior morphological preservation, greater reproducibility, and more intense staining after retrieval. Our study demonstrates the importance of comparing various AR protocols to obtain maximal IHC for standardization and for quantitative IHC.  相似文献   

15.
A novel protocol for antigen retrieval (AR) for immunohistochemistry (IHC) of retinoblastoma protein (pRB) in formalin fixed, paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissue sections was developed using 0.05% citraconic anhydride as the AR solution for heat treatment based on comparison of different methods. This new protocol has advantages including superior morphological preservation, greater reproducibility, and more intense staining after retrieval. Our study demonstrates the importance of comparing various AR protocols to obtain maximal IHC for standardization and for quantitative IHC.  相似文献   

16.
Although the mechanics of formalin fixation and antigen retrieval have been studied extensively and reviewed periodically, little attention has been directed toward conformational changes in target molecules. Formaldehyde changes the shape of tissue molecules by appending small hydroxymethyl groups to them. These adducts, in turn, can react with other tissue molecules to form crosslinks, or they can participate in a variety of reactions during tissue processing, including formation of imines, ethoxymethyl adducts, and further crosslinks. Under the influence of alcohol dehydration, fixed DNA may fragment and form a variety of depurination products. The situation becomes even more complex with short fixation times because under these conditions, the dehydrating agent used for tissue processing denatures macromolecules in other ways, most notably through rearrangement of molecular shape to move hydrophobic realms outward and hydrophilic areas inward (hydrophobic inversions). How tissue molecules are modified affects the outcome of immunohistochemical staining and prospects for restoration of antigenicity. Immunoreacitivity may be compromised because epitopes are either sterically hidden, but otherwise unaffected, or they have been altered more directly. Enzyme-based retrieval methods are best suited for the former because they literally snip the molecule apart to reveal the portions of interest. Heat-induced retrieval with buffers can demodify affected epitopes by removing adducts and breaking crosslinks. The choice of temperature and pH is usually critical for optimal retrieval. Effective temperatures are directly related to the strength of bonds-higher temperatures are needed to break stronger bonds. The pH of the retrieval solution determines the charge on the tissue molecule; the goal is to create a charge that causes the demodified molecule to assume a near natural conformation. Rational use of these concepts should lead to better control of immunohistochemical reactions.  相似文献   

17.
Although the mechanics of formalin fixation and antigen retrieval have been studied extensively and reviewed periodically, little attention has been directed toward conformational changes in target molecules. Formaldehyde changes the shape of tissue molecules by appending small hydroxymethyl groups to them. These adducts, in turn, can react with other tissue molecules to form crosslinks, or they can participate in a variety of reactions during tissue processing, including formation of imines, ethoxymethyl adducts, and further crosslinks. Under the influence of alcohol dehydration, fixed DNA may fragment and form a variety of depurination products. The situation becomes even more complex with short fixation times because under these conditions, the dehydrating agent used for tissue processing denatures macromolecules in other ways, most notably through rearrangement of molecular shape to move hydrophobic realms outward and hydrophilic areas inward (hydrophobic inversions). How tissue molecules are modified affects the outcome of immunohistochemical staining and prospects for restoration of antigenicity. Immunoreacitivity may be compromised because epitopes are either sterically hidden, but otherwise unaffected, or they have been altered more directly. Enzyme-based retrieval methods are best suited for the former because they literally snip the molecule apart to reveal the portions of interest. Heat-induced retrieval with buffers can demodify affected epitopes by removing adducts and breaking crosslinks. The choice of temperature and pH is usually critical for optimal retrieval. Effective temperatures are directly related to the strength of bonds-higher temperatures are needed to break stronger bonds. The pH of the retrieval solution determines the charge on the tissue molecule; the goal is to create a charge that causes the demodified molecule to assume a near natural conformation. Rational use of these concepts should lead to better control of immunohistochemical reactions.  相似文献   

18.
A wealth of information on proteins involved in many aspects of disease is encased within formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded (FFPE) tissue repositories stored in hospitals worldwide. Recently, access to this “hidden treasure” is being actively pursued by the application of two main extraction strategies: digestion of the entangled protein matrix with generation of tryptic peptides, or decrosslinking and extraction of full‐length proteins. Here, we describe an optimised method for extraction of full‐length proteins from FFPE tissues. This method builds on the classical “antigen retrieval” technique used for immunohistochemistry, and allows generation of protein extracts with elevated and reproducible yields. In model animal tissues, average yields of 16.3 μg and 86.8 μg of proteins were obtained per 80 mm2 tissue slice of formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded skeletal muscle and liver, respectively. Protein extracts generated with this method can be used for the reproducible investigation of the proteome with a wide array of techniques. The results obtained by SDS‐PAGE, western immunoblotting, protein arrays, ELISA, and, most importantly, nanoHPLC‐nanoESI‐Q‐TOF MS of FFPE proteins resolved by SDS‐PAGE, are presented and discussed. An evaluation of the extent of modifications introduced on proteins by formalin fixation and crosslink reversal, and their impact on quality of MS results, is also reported.  相似文献   

19.
Synthetic peptides corresponding to amino acid sequences of amino terminal non-alpha helical domains of human cytokeratin 18 and to low molecular weight human neurofilament subunit were used to obtain monospecific antisera. The results of our immunohistochemical investigations confirmed in general the data previously published on the distribution of cytokeratin 18 in human, rat, and calf tissues. The reactivity of the antiserum was abolished after formalin fixation of specimens. Immunolocalization of the neurofilament subunit using our monospecific antiserum was quite variable from species to species in cells of the central and peripheral nervous systems, and also varied as the result of the tissue fixation procedures. In particular, formalin fixation destroyed the immunoreactivity of the recognized epitope. We discuss the advantages and limits of the use of synthetic peptides as immunogens to produce polyclonal antibodies against intermediate filament proteins, with particular attention to the epitope masking phenomena in cytokeratin polypeptides and the phosphorylation of epitopes in neurofilament subunits.  相似文献   

20.
《Cytotherapy》2021,23(8):694-703
Background aimsPreferentially expressed antigen in melanoma (PRAME) is a cancer/testis antigen that is overexpressed in many human malignancies and poorly expressed or absent in healthy tissues, making it a good target for anti-cancer immunotherapy. Development of an effective off-the-shelf adoptive T-cell therapy for patients with relapsed or refractory solid tumors and hematological malignancies expressing PRAME antigen requires the identification of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and II PRAME antigens recognized by the tumor-associated antigen (TAA) T-cell product. The authors therefore set out to extend the repertoire of HLA-restricted PRAME peptide epitopes beyond the few already characterized.MethodsPeptide libraries of 125 overlapping 15-mer peptides spanning the entire PRAME protein sequence were used to identify HLA class I- and II-restricted epitopes. The authors also determined the HLA restriction of the identified epitopes.ResultsPRAME-specific T-cell products were successfully generated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells of 12 healthy donors. Ex vivo-expanded T cells were polyclonal, consisting of both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, which elicited anti-tumor activity in vitro. Nine MHC class I-restricted PRAME epitopes were identified (seven novel and two previously described). The authors also characterized 16 individual 15-mer peptide sequences confirmed as CD4-restricted epitopes.ConclusionsTAA T cells derived from healthy donors recognize a broad range of CD4+ and CD8+ HLA-restricted PRAME epitopes, which could be used to select suitable donors for generating off-the-shelf TAA-specific T cells.  相似文献   

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