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Disaccharides Protect Antigens from Drying-Induced Damage in Routinely Processed Tissue Sections.

The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society (2015-10-22)
Giovanna Boi, Carla Rossana Scalia, Rossella Gendusa, Susanna Ronchi, Giorgio Cattoretti
RÉSUMÉ

Drying of the tissue section, partial or total, during immunostaining negatively affects both the staining of tissue antigens and the ability to remove previously deposited antibody layers, particularly during sequential rounds of de-staining and re-staining for multiple antigens. The cause is a progressive loss of the protein-associated water up to the removal of the non-freezable water, a step which abolishes the immunoavailability of the epitope. In order to describe and prevent these adverse effects, we tested, among other substances, sugars, which are known to protect unicellular organisms from freezing and dehydration, and stabilize drugs and reagents in solid state form in medical devices. Disaccharides (lactose, sucrose) prevented the air drying-induced antigen masking and protected tissue-bound antigens and antibodies from air drying-induced damage. Complete removal of the bound antibody layers by chemical stripping was permitted if lactose was present during air drying. Lactose, sucrose and other disaccharides prevent air drying artifacts, allow homogeneous, consistent staining and the reuse of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections for repeated immunostaining rounds by guaranteeing constant staining quality in suboptimal hydration conditions.

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Monoclonal Anti-CD79A antibody produced in mouse, clone HM47, purified immunoglobulin, buffered aqueous solution