| Literature DB >> 36011152 |
Silvestro Mauriello1, Michele Treglia1, Margherita Pallocci1, Rita Bonfiglio2, Erica Giacobbi2, Pierluigi Passalacqua1, Andrea Cammarano1, Cristian D'Ovidio3, Luigi Tonino Marsella1, Manuel Scimeca2.
Abstract
The main aim of this study was to investigate the post-mortem proteolytic degradation process of selected tissue antigens and correlate it to the post-mortem interval. During the autopsy of 12 cadavers (time interval ranging 1 day-2 years after death) samples of skin, liver, kidney, and spleen were collected. All samples were formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded. Four µm paraffin sections were used for hematoxylin-eosin staining and immunohistochemical analysis (Ki67, Vimentin, Pan cytokeratin, and CD20). Data reported here show that immunohistochemical reactivity preservation was related to the characteristics of the tissues. In particular, the most resistant tissue was the skin, where the autolysis phenomena were not appreciable before 5 days. On the contrary, the liver and the spleen underwent early autolysis, while the kidney displayed an early autolysis of the tubules and a late one of the glomeruli. As concerns specific antigens, immunoreactivity was lost earliest for nuclear antigens as compared to cytoplasmic ones. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that immunohistochemical detection of specific antigens may be useful in estimating the post-mortem interval, especially when we need to know whether the post-mortem interval is a few days or more than 7-10 days.Entities:
Keywords: autopsy; forensic pathology; immunohistochemistry; post-mortem interval; protein degradation; time since death
Year: 2022 PMID: 36011152 PMCID: PMC9408092 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare10081495
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
List of primary antibodies.
| Antibody | Characteristics | Dilution | Retrieval |
|---|---|---|---|
| anti-PanCytokeratin | mouse monoclonal clone [AE1/AE3]; Ventana, Tucson, AZ, USA | Pre-diluted | EDTA citrate pH 7.8 |
| anti-Vimentin | mouse monoclonal clone V9; Ventana, Tucson, AZ, USA | Pre-diluted | EDTA citrate pH 7.8 |
| anti-Ki67 | rabbit monoclonal clone (30-9); Ventana, Tucson, AZ, USA | Pre-diluted | Citrate pH 6.0 |
| anti-CD20 | mouse monoclonal clone L26; Ventana, Tucson, AZ, USA | 1:100 | EDTA citrate pH 7.8 |
Figure 1Morphological analysis of skin. (A,B) Image shows well preserved skin 15 days after death, 10×. (C) Disgregated skin 2 years after death, 10×.
Figure 2Morphological analysis of kidney. (A) Image displays well preserved glomeruli and tubules 1 day after death, 10×. (B) Disgregated glomeruli and tubules 2 years after death, 10×.
Figure 3Morphological analysis of liver. (A) Image displays well preserved glomeruli and tubules 1 day after death, 20×. (B) Disgregated glomeruli and tubules 2 years after death, 10×.
Figure 4Morphological analysis of spleen. (A) Image displays well preserved spleen 5 days after death, 10×. (B) Image shows altered spleen parenchyma 15 days after death, 10×.
Figure 5Immunohistochemical analysis of vimentin. (A) high vimentin expression in liver taken 1 day after death, 10×. (B) High vimentin expression in liver taken 3 days after death, 10×; (C) high vimentin expression in liver taken 15 days after death, 10×. (D) Graph shows the intensity of vimentin immunostaining (score 0–3).
Figure 6Immunohistochemical analysis of ki 67. (A) high nuclear Ki67 expression in skin taken 1 day after death, 10×. (B) Reduction of nuclear Ki67 expression in skin taken 5 day after death, 10×. (C) Ki67 nuclear expression in spleen lymphocytes (3 days after death). 20× (D) No Ki67 nuclear staining in a spleen sample taken 5 days after death, 10×. (E) Graph shows the intensity of ki67 immunostaining (score 0–3).
Figure 7Immunohistochemical analysis of pan-Cytokeratin. (A) very high staining of pan cytokeratin in skin tissue taken 3 days after death, 20×. (B) Subcutaneous tissue taken 3 days after death displays high pan-cytokeratin expression, 10×. (C) High pan cytokeratin expression in a kidney taken 1 day after death, 10×. (D) Aspecific pan cytokeratin staining in a kidney tissue 5 days after death, 20×. (E) Graph shows the intensity of pan-cytokeratin immunostaining (score 0–3).
Figure 8Immunohistochemical analysis of CD20. (A) CD20 positive cells in a spleen taken 2 days after death, 10×; (B) the CD20 staining became faint and less specific 5 days after death, 40×. (C) Graph shows the intensity of CD20 immunostaining in the spleen (score 0–3).
Immunohistochemical evaluation of cytokeratin, ki67, and vimentin in skin tissues.
| Post Mortem Interval | Hematoxylin—Eosin Staining | Anti-Pan-CK Staining | Anti-Ki 67 Staining | Anti-Vimentin Staining |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 day | Preservation of epidermis and cutaneous annex structure | Positive and specific staining in all samples | Intense staining | Positive and specific staining in all samples |
| 3 days | Preservation of epidermis and cutaneous annex structure | Positive and specific staining in all samples | Intense staining | Positive and specific staining in all samples |
| 5 days | Preservation of epidermis and cutaneous annexes structure | Positive and specific staining in all preparations with reduction in intensity | Quantitative decrease of positive cells | Positive and specific staining in all preparations with reduction in intensity |
| 15 days | Preservation of epidermis and cutaneous annexes structure | Positive and specific staining in all preparations with reduction in intensity | Lack of positive cells. | Negative staining |
| 2 years | Negative staining | Negative staining | Negative staining | Negative staining |
Immunohistochemical evaluation of cytokeratin and vimentin in kidney tissues.
| Post Mortem Interval | Hematoxylin—Eosin Staining | Anti-Pan-CK Staining | Anti-Vimentin Staining |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 day | Parenchymal structure clearly detectable with preservation of both glomeruli and tubules | Specific and intense positivity | Specific and intense positivity |
| 3 days | Progressive autolysis of tubular cells with evidence of only isolated tubular structures. Glomeruli still preserved | Specific and intense positivity | Specific and intense positivity |
| 5 days | Parcellular autolysis of glomerular cells | Decreased positivity for autolytic phenomena | Positivity detectable only at the level of some glomerular endothelia while tubules in autolysis are negative |
| 15 days | No longer detectable any cellular structure of the tubules and glomeruli | Non-specific staining | Negative staining |
| 2 years | Negative staining | Negative staining | Negative staining |
Immunohistochemical evaluation of ki67, vimentin, and CD20 in spleen tissues.
| Post Mortem Interval | Hematoxylin—Eosin Staining | Anti Ki-67 Staining | Anti-Vimentin Staining | Anti-CD20 Staining |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 day | Structure of the parenchyma preserved, cellular components are detectable in the red pulp and in the white pulp | Well stained with structure retention | Positive and specific staining in all samples | Positive and specific in all samples |
| 3 days | Lymphatic structures in the white pulp are still well preserved and visible, while a progressive autolysis of red pulp cells is observed | Well stained with structure retention | Negative staining | Positive and specific in all samples |
| 5 days | Progressive autolysis of white pulp lymphocytes appearing as cellular shadows | Rare positive cells | Negative staining | Decreased positivity for autolytic phenomena |
| 15 days | Complete tissue autolysis | Complete tissue autolysis | Negative staining | Non-specific staining |
| 2 years | Negative staining | Negative staining | Negative staining | Negative staining |
Immunohistochemical evaluation of cytokeratin and vimentin in liver tissues.
| Post Mortem Interval | Hematoxylin—Eosin Staining | Anti-Pan-CK Staining | Anti-Vimentin Staining |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 day | Well-preserved structure with clear recognition of hepatocytes | Positive and specific staining in all samples | Positive and specific staining in all samples |
| 3 days | Tissue morphology mostly maintained despite foci of hepatocyte autolysis beginning to appear | Positive and specific staining in all samples | Positive and specific staining in all samples |
| 5 days | Enhanced autolysis phenomena | Positive and specific staining in all preparations with reduction in intensity | Positive and specific staining in all preparations with reduction in intensity |
| 15 days | Complete tissue autolysis | Non-specific staining | Negative staining |
| 2 years | Negative staining | Negative staining | Negative staining |
Summary overview of study characteristics.
| Author and Year | Tissue Sample | Marker | Sample Size and Study Group |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cingolani M. et al., 1994 [ | Skin (sweat glands) | S-100 protein, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), cytokeratin, actin smooth muscle (ASM) | n = 29 corpses with known time since death; samples were taken at intervals of 3, 6, 9 and 12 h after death |
| Wehner F. et al., 1999 [ | Pancreas | Insulin | n = 128 corpses with known time since death (between 1 day and 445 days) |
| Wehner F. et al., 2000 [ | Thyroid | Thyreoglobulin | n = 147 corpses with known time since death (between 1 day and 21 days) |
| Wehner F. et al., 2001 [ | Thyroid | Calcitonin | n = 136 corpses with known time since death (between 1 day and 21 days) |
| Wehner F. et al., 2001 [ | Pancreas | Glucagon | n = 214 corpses with known time since death (between 1 day and 21 days) |
| Wehner F. et al., 2006 [ | Pancreas and brain (frontal cortex) | Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and somatostatin | n = 500 corpses with known time since death (between 1 day and 23 days) |
| Ortmann J. et al., 2017 [ | Pancreas and thyroid | Insulin, glucagon, thyreoglobulin and calcitonin | n = 105 corpses with known time since death (between several hours and 22 days) |
| Mazzotti M.C. et al., 2019 [ | Gingival tissue, sampled from the superior dental arch | Collagen type I and III | n = 10 corpses with known time since death (between 1 and 9 days) |