| Literature DB >> 30357509 |
Sylwia Libard1,2, Dijana Cerjan2, Irina Alafuzoff3,4.
Abstract
Immunohistochemistry (IHC) is influenced by several factors such as cold ischemia time, fixative, fixation time, paraffin, storage time, antibody, antigen retrieval technique and detection systems. In the setting of post-mortem tissue, not only post-mortem delay, but also agonal state is of interest. Here, we assessed an additional variable, i.e., the thickness of the section, and noted that this variable also influenced the IHC outcome. This is of significance when the extent of labelling is a parameter to be assessed, for example when assigning a stage or grade of a disease. Furthermore, when assessing brain tissue with neurons, soma measuring from 4 to 100 µm, various cellular compartments composed of different proteins are localised in sections measuring 4 or 7 µm. Thus, what is seen in a 7-µm-thick section might be lacking in a 4-µm-thick section. Lack of information regarding the molecular size of commercial antibodies is also disturbing as this parameter might influence the distribution of the molecule in the three-dimensional section. The choice of antibody to be used and the staining methodology have been acknowledged being of significance for IHC outcome; however, neither sections thickness or the molecular weight has been discussed sufficiently. IHC has been shown to be an unpredictable technique used for assessment of tissue. This emphasises the need for detailed methodological descriptions in publications, the need to acknowledge and to harmonize all eventual pitfalls related to this methodology.Entities:
Keywords: Extent of staining; Immunohistochemistry; Pitfalls; Thickness of a section
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30357509 PMCID: PMC6328518 DOI: 10.1007/s00418-018-1742-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Histochem Cell Biol ISSN: 0948-6143 Impact factor: 4.304
Fig. 1Photomicrographs of representative stains when using 4 µm (a, c, e, g, i) and 7 µm (b, d, f, h, j) thick sections. The antibodies and staining protocols as summarized in Table 1. Note the increase in labelling when comparing the left column with the right. There is seen both an increase in the number of labelled cell and an increase in labelled cell processes when applying antibodies directed to different cellular compartments as seen in a/b—SMI32, c/d—GFAP, e/f—HLA-DR and i/j—HPτ. Likewise an increase in the extent of the extracellular protein aggregates is observed in g/h—Aβ. The bar is given in j 100 µm
Immunohistochemical stains
| Antibody | Clone | Company/Code | Dilution | Pretreatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amyloid β (Aβ) | 6F/3D | Dako-Agilent/M0872 | 1:50 | 98–100% FA-2 min |
| CD 68 | KP1 | Dako/IR609 | pH high | |
| Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) | Polyclonal | Dako/ Z0334 | pH high | |
| Human leucocytic antigen -DR, α-chain (HLA-DR) | TAL.1B5 | Dako/M0746 | 1:30 | pH low |
| Ionized calcium-binding adaptor molecule1 | Polyclonal | Wako/NordicBiolabs 019-19741 | 1:5000 | pH high |
| Neurofilament H (SMI32) | SMI32 | BioLegend (Sternberger) SMI32 | 1:1000 | pH high |
| Synaptophysin | SP11 | Abcam/ab16659 | 1:40 | pH high |
| Hyperphosphorylated (Ser202/Thr205) τ (HPτ) | PHF-TAU-AT8 | Fisher Sientific-Invitrogen/MN1020 | 1:1000 | None |
Dako Autostainer Plus (Dako Cytomation) was used for amyloid-β, Tau 8, SMI32, HLA-DR and Iba1 whereas CD68, GFAP and synaptophysin were stained with Dako OMNIS. Formic acid (FA)
Stained area fraction (SAF) in percent assessed in the frontal cortex in 4 µm and 7 µm thick sections
| Thickness of the section | 4 µm | 7 µm |
|---|---|---|
| Protein | SAF | |
| Synaptophysin | 86 | 91 |
| Neurofilament H Sternberger-Meyer Immunocytochemicals 32 (SMI32) | 5 | 10 |
| Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) | 78 | 86 |
| CD68 | 2 | 4 |
| Human leucocytic antigen -DR (HLA-DR) | 6 | 9 |
| Ionized calcium-binding adaptor molecule1 | 3 | 5 |
| Amyloid β (Aβ) | 16 | 27 |
| Hyperphosphorylated τ protein (HPτ) | 61 | 72 |