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1.
Silver enlargement of small colloidal gold particles has been extensively used for the light microscopical visualization of gold probes. Very recently, a few investigators have employed physical developers in electron microscopy (both pre-embedding and on-grid staining methods). We now demonstrate that physical development of small colloidal gold particles advantageously can be exploited for labelling biological surfaces in scanning electron microscopy. This novel application of silver enhancement of colloidal gold particles is characterized by a high detection efficiency. Thus, specimens are labelled with small gold probes affording high immunocytochemical efficiency but being impossible to detect with the present scanning microscopes. These particles are subsequently scanning electronmicroscopically visualized by silver enhancement.  相似文献   

2.
We have developed a rapid and precise electron microscope technique for the quantitation of gold particles in suspension using latex microspheres as a reference (EM latex technique). This technique allowed us to determine the specific absorption of colloidal gold at its absorption maximum (520 nm) and the average number of ligands ([125I]IgG) bound to one gold particle. On the basis of these values important binding characteristics of protein-gold complexes to cell surfaces were analyzed in a model system consisting of Staphylococcus aureus with protein A on the cell wall as a specific binding site for IgG-Au. Our observations showed that the number of binding sites represented by one IgG-gold complex depended primarily on the particle size, with one 20-nm IgG-Au corresponding to 15 and one 6-nm IgG-Au to 2.5 binding sites. Hence, the efficiency of binding of IgG-Au complexes increased with decreasing gold particle size. Saturation of binding sites, however, was not achieved. The technique also made possible the determination of the affinity between IgG-Au complexes and the cell surface; this affinity can either be regarded as a characteristic of the ligand IgG or of the gold particle. We observed that the affinity of IgG decreased with the size of the gold particles to which IgG was bound, whereas the affinity of the entire gold particle increased with particle size. The EM latex technique for quantitation of gold particles extends the general use of protein-gold complexes to the quantitative characterization of their interaction with cell surface constituents.  相似文献   

3.
We used the immunogold-silver staining method (IGSS) for detection of lymphocyte cell surface antigens with monoclonal antibodies in light and electron microscopy and compared this procedure with the immunogold staining method. Two different sizes of colloidal gold particles (5 nm and 15 nm) were used in this study. Immunolabeling on cell surfaces was visualized as fine granules only by IGSS in light microscopy. The labeling density (silver-gold complexes/cell) and diameters of silver-enhanced gold particles on cell surfaces were examined by electron microscopy. Labeling density was influenced not by the enhancement time of the physical developer but by the size of the gold particles. However, the development of shells of silver-enhanced gold particles correlated with the enhancement time of the physical developer rather than the size of the colloidal gold particles. Five-nm gold particles enhanced with the physical developer for 3 min were considered optimal for this IGSS method because of reduced background staining and high specific staining in the cell suspensions in sheep lymph. Moreover, this method may make it possible to show the ultrastructure of identical positive cells detected in 1-micron sections counterstained with toluidine blue by electron microscopy, in addition to the percentage of positive cells by light microscopy.  相似文献   

4.
The interaction between peptides and gold surfaces has increasingly been of interest for bionanotechnology applications. To more fully understand how to control such interactions, we have studied the optical properties of peptide-modified gold nanoparticles as a function of peptide composition, pH of the surrounding medium, and peptide concentration. We show using localized surface plasmon resonance, transmission electron microscopy, and surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) that selected “gold-binding peptides” (GBPs), similar to those isolated for binding to gold films using yeast display, can bind to gold nanoparticles at a variety of pHs. Peptide modifications of nanoparticles can lead to irreversible particle aggregation when the pH of the solution is kept below the isoelectric point (pI) of the peptide. However, at pHs above the peptide’s pI, particles remain stable in solution, and peptides remain bound to the particles possibly through amine coordination of gold. Additionally, we demonstrate the potential in using SERS for the direct detection of GBPs on gold-silica nanoshells, eliminating the need for indirect labeling methods.  相似文献   

5.
Antisera against seven different wheat (Triticum aestivum L.)storage protein subfractions were characterized using (1) ELISAwith gliadins and low- and high-molecular weight glutenin subunitsand (2) electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE and acidic buffer PAGE) andimmunoblotting. The specificities of these antisera (polyclonalantibodies) and 13 monoclonal antibodies covered various patternsof reactivity with alpha-, beta-, gamma- and omega-gliadinsand low- and high-molecular weight glutenins. The antisera andantibodies were applied to ultrathin sections of wheat endospermtissue, from kernels fixed 30 d after anthesis, and were detectedby secondary antibodies tagged with either 5 or 15 nm gold particlesusing transmission electron microscopy. Labelling was denserwhen the small gold particles were used but irrespective ofgold particle size, labelling of polyclonal antisera predominatedwhen the endosperm cells were subjected to both mono- and polyclonalantibodies. Each of the antisera and monoclonal antibodies thatlabelled the protein bodies, labelled them more or less uniformly.This indicates that only one kind of protein body, containingall gliadin and glutenin subfractions, exists during this stageof grain development. Electron-dense globular inclusions foundin many protein bodies were not labelled. Label was also foundon protein-like material present in the lumen of the rough endoplasmicreticulum and on vesicles of the Golgi apparatus. Thus concentrationof storage proteins takes place both at the site of synthesis,the lumen of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, and at the siteof processing and transport, the vesicles of the Golgi apparatus.Fusions between these proteinaceous materials give rise to largerprotein bodies and ultimately to the protein matrix. Key words: Wheat, immunocytochemistry, protein bodies, rough endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus  相似文献   

6.
Summary In the present study, we have investigated the applicability of semi-thin sections from low temperature Lowicryl K4M-embedded tissues for cytochemical labelling with protein A—gold and lectin—gold complexes. In order to ensure the best possible signal-to-noise ratio antibodies, protein A—gold and lectin—gold were applied in concentrations used for labelling at the electron microscope level. Furthermore, due to the lack of an appropriate chemical procedure for resin removal, untreated semi-thin sections were incubated. Under such conditions, semi-thin sections displayed either no visible staining or only a faint incomplete staining. However, following photochemical silver reaction, the latent or faint incomplete staining was rendered visible in most cases. It is concluded that the same block of Lowicryl K4M-embedded tissue and the same labelling reagents can be used for both light and electron microscopical cytochemical studies. At the light microscopical level, a high degree of structural and specific staining information is obtained. The reactivity of cellular components with antibodies or lectins is preserved even after years of storage of the blocks or slides containing semi-thin sections.  相似文献   

7.
Labelling of colloidal gold with protein   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary Markers prepared by labelling colloidal gold with macromolecules such as lectins, antibodies and protein A are gaining wise acceptance both in transmission and scanning electron microscopy. However detailed information on the process and extent of adsorption of macromolecules onto gold particles are still lacking. The adsorption isotherm of protein onto gold particles was studied quantitatively using goat -lactoglobulin (L) tritiated in vivo. When this protein was modified chemically by iodination with 125I, the adsorption isotherm was not significantly different (Langmuir type for monolayer). In the presence of saturating amount of L, a maximum of 13–14 molecules was adsorbed per particle of 12 nm in diameter for a theoretical maximum of 20 (compact monolayer). Ellipsometric measurements on nickel-coated slides indicated that L was adsorbed onto metallic surfaces as a compact monolayer. The molecules were irreversibly adsorbed on gold particles, kept to a large extent their capacity to bind anti-L antibodies and could not be displaced by polyethylene glycol, a stabilizer commonly used in the preparation of gold markers. Only markers labelled with more than 5 L molecules per particle could be completely bound by immobilized anti-L antibodies. Preliminary data indicated that the energetics of adsorption of L onto colloidal gold was in agreement with that expected from the mutual interaction of surface and adsorbate.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The preparation of a protein A-gold complex (pAg3) using 3 nm gold particles and its application for labelling of intracellular antigens on thin sections is reported. The 3 nm gold particle is the smallest metal particle currently available for cytochemistry and permits a higher resolution of the pAg technique. Furthermore, it can be used in double labelling experiments in conjunction with a pAg complex prepared from 15 nm gold particles. For double labelling, the pAg3 complex must be used for staining of the first antigen since otherwise a non-specific co-labelling of the two pAg complexes results.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The auxin-binding protein ABP-1 was localised immunocytochemically in coleoptiles and immature embryos ofZea mays. Two primary polyclonal antibodies raised against ABP-1 and secondary antibodies were either labelled with FITC or 10 nm gold particles for light microscopy, and with 10 nm gold particles for transmission electron microscopy. Light microscopy revealed that ABP-1 was localised in the epidermal cells of etiolated maize coleoptiles, in subepidermal parenchymatic mesophyll cells of the coleoptile and in the companion cells of the vascular bundles. Most labelling was found in the cytoplasm, less in nuclei and vacuoles and cell walls appeared negative. The region of the plasma membrane exhibited prominent labelling. Embryos showed low labelling throughout their tissues just after excision, but after culture for 7 days intensive labelling was found in the epidermis of the scutellum. Quantitative electron microscopy confirmed that ABP-1 was present in the cytoplasm of epidermal, mesophyll, and companion cells of coleoptiles. Gold particles were neither found in cell walls nor in the cuticle. Areas with ER and dictyosomes within epidermal and mesophyll cells of coleoptiles had a denser labelling with gold particles than elsewhere. Labelling at the plasma membrane, being the site where the auxin binds to the ABP, was observed at low levels in all cells examined, which is due to the method applied. Epidermal cells of embryos cultured for 5 days exhibited high levels of gold particles in ER and nuclei, and lower levels in the cytoplasm. The distribution is only partly in accordance with the model in which ABP is thought to cycle through the plant cell from the ER via the Golgi system towards the plasma membrane.Abbreviations ABP-1 auxin-binding protein 1 - BSA bovine serum albumin - 2,4-D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid - EM electron microscopy - LM light microscopy - LR Write London resin white - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - PEG polyethylene glycol - TEM transmission electron microscopy  相似文献   

10.
Immunocytochemical markers prepared by labelling colloidal gold with antibodies are gaining wide acceptance both in transmission and scanning electron microscopy. However, detailed information on the process and extent of adsorption of IgG and IgE in particular are still lacking. The adsorption isotherm of mouse monoclonal 125I-IgE antibovine milk beta-lactoglobulin was studied quantitatively with colloidal gold buffered at pH 6.1-8.8 (28 nm in particle diameter). At low coverage of the particles (less that or equal to 5 molecules per particle), the isotherm was independent of pH. In the presence of a large excess of IgE, the highest coverage was obtained at pH 6.1 near the pI of IgE (5.2-5.8). The binding constants were higher at low coverage (side-on adsorption) than at high coverage where desorption was observed. IgE-Au markers were unreactive towards the immobilized antigen and did not bind to receptors for IgE of rat basophilic leukemia cells (RBL-1). The reactivity of immobilized anti-IgE antibodies with IgE-Au markers increased as a function of particle coverage. Mapping of RBL-1 cell membrane IgE receptors was achieved by incubating successively IgE-sensitized RBL-1 cells with anti-IgE antibodies and a protein A-gold marker at 4 degrees C. Surface clusters developed when the cells were incubated at 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Silver enlargement of small colloidal gold particles has been extensively used for the light microscopical visualization of gold probes. Very recently, a few investigators have employed physical developers in electron microscopy (both pre-embedding and on-grid staining methods). We now demonstrate that physical development of small colloidal gold particles advantageously can be exploited for labelling biological surfaces in scanning electron microscopy. This novel application of silver enhancement of colloidal gold particles is characterized by a high detection efficiency. Thus, specimens are labelled with small gold probes affording high immunocytochemical efficiency but being impossible to detect with the present scanning microscopes. These particles are subsequently scanning electronmicro-scopically visualized by silver enhancement.Presented in part at the International Symposium on Biological Regulation of Cell Proliferation, 9th International Chalone Conference, Milano, Italy, March 3–6, 1986  相似文献   

12.
Metallic particles and surfaces display diverse and complex optical properties. Examples include the intense colors of noble metal colloids, surface plasmon resonance absorption by thin metal films, and quenching of excited fluorophores near the metal surfaces. Recently, the interactions of fluorophores with metallic particles and surfaces (metals) have been used to obtain increased fluorescence intensities, to develop assays based on fluorescence quenching by gold colloids, and to obtain directional radiation from fluorophores near thin metal films. For metal-enhanced fluorescence it is difficult to predict whether a particular metal structure, such as a colloid, fractal, or continuous surface, will quench or enhance fluorescence. In the present report we suggest how the effects of metals on fluorescence can be explained using a simple concept, based on radiating plasmons (RPs). The underlying physics may be complex but the concept is simple to understand. According to the RP model, the emission or quenching of a fluorophore near the metal can be predicted from the optical properties of the metal structures as calculated from electrodynamics, Mie theory, and/or Maxwell's equations. For example, according to Mie theory and the size and shape of the particle, the extinction of metal colloids can be due to either absorption or scattering. Incident energy is dissipated by absorption. Far-field radiation is created by scattering. Based on our model small colloids are expected to quench fluorescence because absorption is dominant over scattering. Larger colloids are expected to enhance fluorescence because the scattering component is dominant over absorption. The ability of a metal's surface to absorb or reflect light is due to wavenumber matching requirements at the metal-sample interface. Wavenumber matching considerations can also be used to predict whether fluorophores at a given distance from a continuous planar surface will be emitted or quenched. These considerations suggest that the so called "lossy surface waves" which quench fluorescence are due to induced electron oscillations which cannot radiate to the far-field because wavevector matching is not possible. We suggest that the energy from the fluorophores thought to be lost by lossy surface waves can be recovered as emission by adjustment of the sample to allow wavevector matching. The RP model provides a rational approach for designing fluorophore-metal configurations with the desired emissive properties and a basis for nanophotonic fluorophore technology.  相似文献   

13.
Immunolabeling efficiency of protein A-gold complexes   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
A systematic study of the adsorption of protein A on colloidal gold particles varying in size from 5-16 nm was performed at different protein concentrations. The number of protein A molecules bound per colloidal particle was evaluated and the Scatchard analysis of the adsorption parameters was applied for each size of the colloid. The binding of protein A to the colloidal gold surface exhibited the same affinity pattern for all of the particle sizes. At low concentrations of stabilizing protein, adsorption took place with high affinity (Kd 1.96-3.3 nM) and the maximum number of protein A molecules attached with this affinity correlated well with the surface of the particle. At higher concentrations of protein A, adsorption exhibited a significantly lower affinity (Kd 530-800 nM), and no saturation was recorded. Competition by albumin did not reveal a preferential removal of the "low-affinity" bound protein A molecules, contradicting the model of successive shells of stabilizing protein around the colloidal particle. The immunolabeling efficiency of conjugates having the same size of gold nucleus but carrying different numbers of protein A molecules was comparatively investigated by quantitative post-embedding immunocytochemistry. Protein A-gold formed with 5-10-nm colloids gave the highest intensity of labeling when carrying the maximum number of protein A molecules that could be adsorbed with high affinity. Overloading as well as underloading these complexes resulted in a significant decrease of their immunoreactivity. The most efficient conjugates were obtained when stabilization was performed with 6 micrograms protein A/ml gold sol of 5 and 10 nm particle diameter, and 15 micrograms protein/ml of 15-nm colloid.  相似文献   

14.
Colloidal gold labeling in conjunction with silver enhancement was investigated as a labeling technique for photoelectron microscopy (PEM). PEM uses UV-stimulated electron emission to image uncoated cell surfaces, and markers for cell surfaces need to be sufficiently photoemissive to be clearly visible against this background. Label contrast provided by 6 nm or 20 nm colloidal gold markers alone was compared to that provided by 6 nm markers after silver enhancement, using both direct and indirect labeling methods for fibronectin on human fibroblast cell surfaces. In all cases, details of the fibrillar fibronectin labeling distribution which were barely discernible before silver enhancement became highly visible against the cellular surface features. Two factors evidently contribute to the pronounced increase in label contrast with silver enhancement: (1) Increased particle size, which was documented by transmission electron microscopy, and (2) increased photoemission resulting from a silver coating on the enhanced gold markers, compared with the protein coating on the unenhanced gold markers. These data demonstrate that silver enhancement of colloidal gold labeling patterns in PEM images is a highly effective method for localization of specific sites on cell surfaces.  相似文献   

15.
N. Harris  R. R. D. Croy 《Planta》1985,165(4):522-526
The major albumin protein in storage parenchyma tissue of developing peas has been localised at an ultrastructural level by immunocytochemistry. Tissue was fixed in buffered aldehyde and embedded in LR White resin which was polymerised by addition of catalyst. Sections were labelled by the indirect method of absorption of Protein A-gold to specifically bound antibodies. This method gives high levels of specific labelling on sections which retain good ultrastructural preservation and have high contrast after conventional staining. The albumin is located throughout the cytoplasm although no labelling was found associated with the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, vacuoles-protein bodies or other organelles.Abbreviation PMA pea major albumin protein  相似文献   

16.
Summary A new method is reported for the preparation of colloidal gold particles with diameters ranging between 5 and 12 nm. The initial gold particle population, with an average diameter of 5.6±0.9 nm, is prepared by reduction of chloroauric acid with white phosphorous. An increase in particle diameter by growth is obtained by reduction of chloroauric acid with white phosphorous in the presence of colloidal gold particles. The labelling efficiency of these gold particles, conjugated with protein A, in indirect immunolabelling experiments is investigated by labelling of -galactosidase on ultrathin cryosections of Escherichia coli cells. We demonstrate that the labelling efficiency is at least dependent on particle diameter, probe concentration and preparation method. In addition it is shown, that with this new method, gold particle populations can be prepared with minor overlap in diameter spreading. Therefore these gold probes are suitable for qualitative double labelling experiments. The quantitative aspect of immunolabelling is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Two monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to different epitopes on human placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP), both of the immunoglobulin G2a heavy-chain class and having similar affinities for PLAP, were compared for their ability to label the enzyme on the HeLa cell surface. In one type of experiment employing [125I]-labeled mAbs, the results demonstrated quantitative differences in binding of the mAbs to the cells. At saturating levels, the number of molecules of mAb E5 bound to the cells was almost eight times the number of mAb B10 molecules bound. In another type of experiment, mAbs were indirectly visualized on the cell surface using protein A tagged with colloidal gold particles in transmission electron microscopy. Only one of the antibodies (E5) displayed a clustered distribution of PLAP that previously had been observed with rabbit polyclonal antibodies and goat anti-rabbit IgG-labeled gold (J Histochem Cytochem 33:1227, 1985). The other antibody (B10) showed less frequent and more scattered labeling; three to four times more gold particles were visualized in each cluster on cells bound by mAb E5 compared to cells bound by B10. These results are consistent with the idea that not all epitopes on a membrane-bound antigen may be equally accessible for antibody binding. Even identical epitopes on different PLAP molecules are not equally hindered by other membrane components, since at least some of the PLAP molecules are labeled by the more sterically hindered mAb B10. Quantification of the number of gold particles employing the more abundantly bound mAb E5 provides an average estimate of seven to eight molecules of PLAP in each cluster. Because of inefficiencies in labeling, however, this value is probably lower than the real number.  相似文献   

18.
The availability of 1-nm gold particles permits the use of a particulate label with standard pre-embedding electron microscopic immunocytochemical techniques. We have employed these particles to localize a synaptic vesicle protein, p65, and a growth-associated protein, GAP-43, in neuron cell cultures. To be detected by standard transmission electron microscopy, these ultra-small gold particles must be enlarged. We have applied a commercially available silver development kit (IntenseM), the method of Danscher, and a neutral pH development procedure which we developed to effect this enlargement. Although IntenseM permits development with good preservation of morphology, it is limited by lack of reproducibility and by variability of final particle size. The method of Danscher provides well-controlled and reproducible enlargement, but is limited with respect to preservation of ultrastructural details. The neutral pH development procedure reproducibly enlarges gold particles with superior preservation of morphology. The use of this development procedure in conjunction with 1-nm gold probes should permit precise ultrastructural localization of a variety of intracellular antigens.  相似文献   

19.
The detecting sensitivities of different-sized gold particles were compared in the localization of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) in rat atria. The secondary antibodies were goat antirabbit labeled with 5, 15, 30, or 40 nm colloidal gold diluted 1:2 to 1:100 in Tris buffer. The relative quantity of alpha-ANP immunoreactivity in specific granules was determined by subtracting the number of gold particles in 1 micron 2 nongranule area from that in 1 micron 2 granule area measured with a computerized image analyzer. The optimal dilution that achieved the maximal contrast between specific and background label was influenced by the particle size. Optimal dilutions were 1:80, 1:30, 1:20, and 1:5 for 5, 15, 30, and 40 nm gold, respectively. At optimal dilutions, the maximal detecting sensitivity (MDS) was in inverse proportion to the gold particle size; however, this relationship is not entirely linear. The ratio among the MDSs of 5, 15, 30, and 40 nm gold particles was approximately 34:9:3:2. A double immunogold staining was performed to localize alpha- and beta-ANPs with 15 and 5 nm gold, respectively. Both antigens were detected in the same granules. If the ratios established from the single staining data were used, the ratio between the alpha- and the beta-ANP antigens in the same granules was approximately 2.8:1. The data obtained in this study provide a useful reference for applications of immunogold electron microscopy in a quantitative manner, particularly for double immunogold labeling.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Microwave irradiation has been applied to reduce the immunogold staining time of ultrathin sections of Lowicryl embedded specimens. Labelling has been stimulated by microwave irradiation during incubation with 10nm colloidal gold particls coated with either goat anti-mouse antibodies (GaM-gold) or goat anti-rabbit antibodies (GaR-gold) and has been compared with control incubations. Quantification has been performed on cytoplasmic membranes or lysosomes labelled with a primary antibody. Counting the gold particles over specific and non-specific sites in electron micrographs and electron microscopic images by IBAS 2000 revealed that irradiation of 25 l droplets both at 80W and 150 W resulted in an accelerated immunogold labelling, while the non-specific background levels were not increased. A plateau level in immunogold labelling intensity was reached after 25 min incubation under microwave irradiation at 150W as compared to 120 min incubation without microwaves. No improvement in localization sharpness of immunogold labelling on membranes was achieved by microwave irradiation. The microwave-mediated acceleration of immunogold staining may be considered as an example of a staining method with a restricted thermal action on microvolumes as indicated by direct temperature measurements using a fibre-optic thermometer.  相似文献   

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