[Histonet] CD4 CD8 in FFPE murine tissue
Jackie M O'Connor
Jackie.O'Connor <@t> abbott.com
Wed Dec 22 11:32:16 CST 2004
Thanks, Gayle -
I've seen the previous posts re: not working on FFPE - that's why I was
hoping for a Christmas miracle!!
Looks like I'll have to resort to zinc. We use StreckTissueFixative in
instances like this. Bah Humbug!
Jackie
Gayle Callis <gcallis <@t> montana.edu>
12/22/2004 11:23 AM
To: "Jackie M O'Connor" <Jackie.O'Connor <@t> abbott.com>,
Histonet <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu
cc:
Subject: Re: [Histonet] CD4 CD8 in FFPE murine tissue
Dear Jackie,
There are no miracles for FFPE mouse tissues and CD4/CD8 including a
miracle antigen retrieval or enzyme digestion that will recover these
antigens after formalin or paraformaldehyde (the enemies)! This has been
discussed innumerable times on Histonet, and so far, NO ONE has come up
with a solution for FFPE CD4 and CD8 success. It is an unfortunate fact
of
murine IHC life.
You have options.
If you insist on paraffin, you can only use the zinc tris buffer fixative
(formalin free) which you can make up yourself. Tissues have fairly good
morphology, but not equivalent to NBF fixed tissues. However, you can do
CD4 and CD8, but it is advisable to use alk phos enzyme IHC since endog
peroxidases are horrible, cannot be quenched after this fixation. The
tissues are drier, so careful limited processing is a good idea, and lots
of block face soaking before sectioning. BD Pharmingen sells the fixative,
but it is really easy to make up in house. I will be happy to send method
privately. Antibody concentrations are fairly close to frozen section
work. I was not impressed with sectioning after this fixative and thought
the tissue looked dry, so all the publications on this that tout
equivalent
morphology as NBF have not proved to be entirely accurate.
I don't know if PLP fixation would help either, I have seen little success
with this fixative.
The best and other alternative is to do fresh snap frozen tissues. This
is
all we do with all our murine tissues, since we have to do CD4 and 8 along
with several other CD markers on a single sample of tissue. This totally
rules out FFPE for what we do so we don't even bother with NBF. Our
morphology is excellent along with wonderful IHC staining using 75%
acetone/25% absolute ethanol (A/A) fixation. You cannot substitute
alcohol
and you cannot do harsh endog perox block - use DAKO S2001 peroxidase
block
instead to save the section from bubbling off a slide. Some people use
acetone, but we have found AA to be superior. If we do acetone, it is a
double acetone fixation. Air dry overnight, 4C acetone 10 min, air dry 15
min in front of fan, return to 4C acetone for 10 min, air dry, rinse off
OCT and proceed with staining. If you are doing large studies, there are
some snap freezing methods that allow you to handle large load freezing
sessions and not use liq nitrogen cooled isopentane or hexane.
Method: snap freeze tissues, air dry FS overnight at RT then fix in
Acetone/alcohol fixative for 5 min at RT, go directly to buffer rinse X
2. DO NOT redry sections after this fixation. Proceed with staining
includine DAKO perox block, and avidin/biotin blocking.
I have one method using A/A fixation, using biotinylated CD4, then
Strepavidin-HRP, DAB+ from DAKO and DAB enhancer from DAKO. I had to use
the glucose oxidase endogenous peroxidase block, but I had my primary
antibody diluted out 1:15,000 and fading at 1:20,000. This is something
you never see with FFPE, and probably not with ZnTris buffer fixative
either.
I suggest you use the Permanent Red (new from DAKO) as it is more
sensitive
(Chris van der Loos would say efficient) with the ZNTRIS fix, you probably
will have even lower primary concentrations.
Good luck from one of Santa's murine IHC elves
At 09:25 AM 12/22/2004, you wrote:
>Does anyone have any Christmas miracles for CD4 and CD8 in FFPE mouse?
>
>Jacqueline M. O'Connor HT(ASCP)
>Abbott Laboratories
>Global Pharmaceutical Research and Development
>Discovery Chemotherapeutics
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