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Antigen Masking During Fixation and Embedding, Dissected

Authors :
Francesca Maria Bosisio
Maddalena Maria Bolognesi
Giorgio Cattoretti
Biagio Eugenio Leone
Linde Desmedt
Susanna Ronchi
Carla Rossana Scalia
Giovanna Boi
Lorella Riva
Marco Manzoni
Scalia, C
Boi, G
Bolognesi, M
Riva, L
Manzoni, M
Desmedt, L
Bosisio, F
Ronchi, S
Leone, B
Cattoretti, G
Source :
Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry. 65:5-20
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2016.

Abstract

Antigen masking in routinely processed tissue is a poorly understood process caused by multiple factors. We sought to dissect the effect on antigenicity of each step of processing by using frozen sections as proxies of the whole tissue. An equivalent extent of antigen masking occurs across variable fixation times at room temperature. Most antigens benefit from longer fixation times (>24 hr) for optimal detection after antigen retrieval (AR; for example, Ki-67, bcl-2, ER). The transfer to a graded alcohol series results in an enhanced staining effect, reproduced by treating the sections with detergents, possibly because of a better access of the polymeric immunohistochemical detection system to tissue structures. A second round of masking occurs upon entering the clearing agent, mostly at the paraffin embedding step. This may depend on the non-freezable water removal. AR fully reverses the masking due both to the fixation time and the paraffin embedding. AR itself destroys some epitopes which do not survive routine processing. Processed frozen sections are a tool to investigate fixation and processing requirements for antigens in routine specimens.

Details

ISSN :
15515044 and 00221554
Volume :
65
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3f133b6ba719d87c44d67897d8794fc4