PRAC 1: ihc Flashcards
antibodies in immunohistochemsitry
diagram of antibody
how to make antibody
antibodies contain immunogloblin (Ig) protein fields that are also found in other proteins
antibodies contain:
- light chain
- heavy chain
- variable domains (antigen binding)
- constant region
- carbohydrate
- disulphide bonds
making an antibody:
- place protein in foreign location (i.e. animal)
- protein chopped up into peptides and presented to immune system
- isolate blood and obtain serum
best control: tissue without protein because antibody only works on tissue with protein`
polyclonal vs monoclonal antibodies
polyclonal:
- many species
- antibodies bind to multiple sites on protein (better reactivity)
- multiple antigenic epitopes contained within serum
monoclonal:
- mouse and rat only
- antibody recognises single antigenic epitopes (specific tools)
immonohistochemistry method
1) blocking
- reduce non-specific background
- bombard cell with lots of protein
- detergent, horse serum
2) washers
- remove anything not tightly bound
- eliminates false positive signal
3) add substrate
antigens
in response to foreign object (virus) body produces many types of antibodies
antigen has many different epitopes that might be recognised by host immune system (not foreign)
b-cells recognise antigen and respond, amplify and produce antibodies
immunolocalisations
principle: antigen identification in a biological sample by antibodies
direct method:
- antibody raised to recognise target antigen
- fluorochrome directly conjugated to antibody
- inconvenient because have to make specific antibody or
indirect method
- primary antibody still detects antigen
fluorescence spectra
fluorescent dyes absorb best at certain wavelengths
light absorbed and emitted allows you to calculate shift = STOKES SHIFT
bigger shift = easier to distinguish signals
use filter to ignore unwanted light and increase specificity
emitting light in specific spectrum can excite a different dye = non-specific communication
limiting factor of airy disk and microscope resolution
light waves have peaks and secondary waves
overlapping fluorescent dyes have low resolution
limit for microscopy is 200nm i.e. objects closer than 200nm cannot be distinguished
fluorescent proteins (GFP)
visualising protein interactions (FRET)
discovery of green fluorescent protein (GFP) in jellyfish led to change in biological imaging
variations of these proteins can be attached to other proteins and cloned into cells
the GFP, attached to protein of interest, is expressed in living cells and allows us to visualise the localisation of the protein of interest in the live state
protein-protein interactions visualised by FRET
use two different fluorescent proteins so that when one is excited, energy will be transferred to the second protein via FRET provided they are sufficiently close
types of confocal microscopy
point scanning: provides exceptionally high resolution in 2D and 3D
spinning disk: real time location of fluorescent reporter can be captured
two-photon: used to explore thicker samples including living samples
sham control
sham control is a negative control
surgical control where the therapeutically necessary step is omitted
roles of:
- haematoxylin
- horseradish peroxidase
- hydrogen peroxide
- eosin
haematoxylin stains nuclei purple.
horseradish peroxidase Converts DAB into brown precipitate.
hydrogen peroxide quenches endogenous peroxidases in tissue.
eosin stains cytoplasm pink.