scholarly journals Immunocytochemistry with osmium-fixed tissue. I. Light microscopic localization of growth hormone and prolactin with the unlabeled antibody-enzyme method.

1979 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 867-872 ◽  
Author(s):  
D G Baskin ◽  
S L Erlandsen ◽  
J A Parsons

Growth hormone and prolactin were localized on thin plastic sections of rat anterior pituitary gland and mammosomatotropic tumor MtTW15 that were fixed with osmium tetroxide (alone,mixed with aldehydes, or after aldehydes). Intense immunocytochemical staining for both antigens was obtained after plastic was removed from sections with an alcoholic solution of sodium hydroxide. The results indicated that antigenic determinants of rat prolactin and growth hormone were not completely destroyed or inactivated by fixation with osmium and embedment in epoxy resin, and that removal of the polymerized epoxy resin was necessary to obtain light microscopic postembedding immunocytochemical staining of these antigens. The results also demonstrated that tissues which have been conventionally processed for morphological evaluation by electron microscopy may be suitable for postembedding immunocytochemical staining of some antigens for light microscopy.

1975 ◽  
Vol 23 (9) ◽  
pp. 666-677 ◽  
Author(s):  
S L Erlandsen ◽  
J A Parsons ◽  
J P Burke ◽  
J A Redick ◽  
D E Van Orden ◽  
...  

The requirement of using homologous antisera (primary antiserum and peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) complex raised in the same species) in the unlabeled antibody enzyme method has been investigated at the light and electron microscopic level using the localization of insulin, glucagon and growth hormone as model systems. Optimum immunocytochemical staining for all three antigens was observed when sheep or goat antirabbit gamma-globulin (S-ARgammaG or G-ARgammaG) were used to couple rabbit peroxidase-antiperoxidase complex with either guinea pig antisera to insulin (GP-AIS) or glucagon (GP-AGS), or monkey antisera to rat growth hormone (M-ARGH). The cross-reactivity between S-ARgammaG or G-ARgammaG and immunoglobulins in these primary antisera were substantiated by immunoelectrophoresis and radioimmunoassay. S-ARgammaG was shown to produce precipitation arcs with GP-AIS and M-ARGH that were similar to those seen when the latter were reacted with rabbit antiguinea pig gamma-globulin antiserum and goat antimonkey gamma-globulin antiserum, respectively. Radioimmunoassay results revealed that immunoprecipitation of 6-10% as compared to homologous antisera controls yielded excellent staining localization when S-ARgammaG was used for immunocytochemistry. Thus, heterologous antisera (primary antiserum and PAP complex raised in different species) may be used in the unlabeled antibody enzyme method as long as the coupling antiserum shows cross-reactivity with immunoglobulins of the primary antiserum and the PAP complex.


1974 ◽  
Vol 22 (8) ◽  
pp. 782-801 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOHN P. PETRALI ◽  
DENNIS M. HINTON ◽  
GWEN C. MORIARTY ◽  
LUDWIG A. STERNBERGER

Araldite sections of rat pituitary intermediate lobe were used with anti-17-39 adrenocorticotropin in the unlabeled antibody enzyme method to compare electron microscopic immunocytochemical staining by peroxidase-antiperoxidase complex (PAP) with antiserum or purified antibody to peroxidase followed by peroxidase (PO). Quantitation of normalized optical densities of secretory granules offered high significance comparison (P < 0.0001) of experimental with control values and of experimental values with each other. Use of purified antibody (prepared by a new density gradient method) yielded four times higher sensitivity than antiserum to PO, while a 6.5-fold increase would have been expected from the degree of contamination of anti-PO in the serum by nonanti-PO immunoglobulin. Use of PAP was four to five times more sensitive than purified anti-PO and 20 times more sensitive than antiserum to PO. The increased sensitivity of PAP is explained by the high over-all binding affinity of PO for anti-PO in the cyclic PAP molecule, thus preventing the losses of PO that occur during washing when anti-PO and PO have been applied in sequence. Identification of the characteristic, cyclic PAP molecules affords confirmation of specific staining at high resolution. In the sequential application of anti-PO and PO, no PAP molecules are formed, thus making distinction of specific from nonspecific deposition of enzyme reaction products ambiguous. With the use of anti-17-39 ACTH and the intermediate lobe, the unlabeled antibody enzyme method was 16,000-100,000 times more sensitive than radioimmunoassay.


Author(s):  
F.W. Van Leeuwen

In order to obtain specific and optimal ultrastructural localization of vasopressin and oxytocin in the hypothalamo-neurohypophyseal system of the rat, 2 staining procedures and several tissue treatments were evaluated using neurohypophyseal tissue. It appeared from these studies that post-embedding staining with the unlabeled antibody enzyme method developed by Sternberger allows greater dilution of the first antibody (anti-vasopressin, 1:4800) than the indirect procedure (1:320) using a peroxidase conjugate as second antibody. Immersion fixation with 4% formalin during 24 hours gave better results (general ultrastructure, immunoreactivity) than those obtained by perfusion fixation with 2.5% glutaraldehyde-1% paraformaldehyde or freeze substitution.Since no reliable specificity tests were performed at the electron microscopical level, tests were developed for antibodies against both vasopressin and oxytocin. For anti-vasopressin plasma neural lobes of homozygous Brattleboro rats, that are lacking vasopressin by a genet- ical defect, were used. For antibodies against both hormones serial sections were used that were alternately incubated with the antibodies.


1983 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 263-274 ◽  
Author(s):  
R J Morris ◽  
P C Barber

It has proved difficult to obtain good immunohistochemical localization of cell surface antigens in nerve for a number of reasons, prominent among which are problems of fixing this class of molecule without destroying their antigenicity. In the course of developing a fixation procedure suitable for one such antigen. Thy-1, we have quantitatively assessed the effect of different fixation parameters upon the retention of Thy-1 antigenicity and upon the extent of cross-linking of the antigen in the tissue. The former was measured using radioimmunoassays adapted for membrane antigens in fixed tissue, the latter by measuring the proportion of antigen rendered insoluble to the detergent, sodium deoxycholate, and by examining the size of the antigen on sodium dodecyl sulfate--polyacrylamide gels. These approaches demonstrated that minor modifications of the standard vascular perfusion fixation of brain, using both glutaraldehyde and paraformaldehyde, were sufficient to fix the Thy-1 molecule, and at the same time substantially spare its antigenicity. In this study we measured Thy-1 using both a conventional rabbit antiserum and a mouse monoclonal antibody to the Thy-1.1 antigenic determinant. The multiple antigenic determinants recognized by the rabbit antibodies were cumulatively more resistant to fixation than the single antigenic determinant recognized by the monoclonal antibody.


1980 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 552-556 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Cocchia ◽  
F Michetti

Antibodies against the loosely bound subnuclear protein fraction (0.35 M NaCl-extractable subnuclear fraction) of rat brain were raised in rabbits, and the ultrastructural distribution of the antigenic determinants in rat cerebellum was studied using the unlabeled antibody peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) method. A localization restricted to the nucleus was observed. Both neuronal and neuroglial nuclei exhibited antigens, whereas nuclei of pericytes and endothelial cells did not. The immunoreaction product was homogeneously distributed in dispersed chromatin and was absent from condensed chromatin, suggesting that the antigens were confined to the active regions of the genoma. The outer nuclear membrane and the nucleolus appeared to be free of the antigens, while a perinucleolar ring of immunoreaction was detectable. Liver preparations showed a nuclear reaction markedly weaker than the one for brain nuclei. Adsorption of the serum with isolated liver nuclei nullified the reactivity in liver tissue, whereas a sharp reaction was still observed in the cerebellum, indicating the subcellular reaction under examination to contain antigens specifically concentrated in the nervous system or unique to the brain.


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