Gill_2005_J.Neurosci.Methods_148_26

Reference

Title : Exposure of nuclear antigens in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded necropsy human spinal cord tissue: detection of NeuN - Gill_2005_J.Neurosci.Methods_148_26
Author(s) : Gill SK , Ishak M , Rylett RJ
Ref : Journal of Neuroscience Methods , 148 :26 , 2005
Abstract :

Immunohistochemical and immunofluorescence staining approaches are powerful tools for characterization of the endogenous protein expression and subcellular compartmentalization. However, several technical problems hamper identification of low-abundance nuclear proteins in archival formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded human neural tissue. These include loss of protein antigenicity during tissue fixation and processing, and intrinsic auto-fluorescence associated with the tissue related to its fixation and the presence of lipofuscin. We evaluated several antigen retrieval methods to establish a strategy for detection of neuronal nuclear proteins in human spinal cord formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue. Thus, using immunostaining of the neuron-specific nuclear protein NeuN as the outcome measure, we found that heating tissue sections in an alkaline pH buffer unmasked protein epitopes most effectively. Moreover, staining by immunohistochemistry with diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride chromagen was superior to immunofluorescence labeling, likely due to the signal amplification steps included in the former approach. Auto-fluorescence in the tissue sections can be effectively reduced, but a sufficient fluorescence signal associated with specific antibody labeling could not be detected above this background for NeuN in the nucleus.

PubMedSearch : Gill_2005_J.Neurosci.Methods_148_26
PubMedID: 16176837

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Citations formats

Gill SK, Ishak M, Rylett RJ (2005)
Exposure of nuclear antigens in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded necropsy human spinal cord tissue: detection of NeuN
Journal of Neuroscience Methods 148 :26

Gill SK, Ishak M, Rylett RJ (2005)
Journal of Neuroscience Methods 148 :26