Immunocytochemistry:
Common problems and some answers.
Immunocytochemistry
at the ultrastructural level (TEM)
Results
obtained from immunocytochemical labeling can often differ from
what was expected. Sometimes this may result in the formulation
of new theories but often good results are ignored because of
faulty interpretations.
- There
are three major problems encountered when immunolabeling.
These are:
- Little
or no label detected
- Too
much label present
- Contamination
on the specimen
No
Label Detected
Possible causes
- Antigen
destruction, masking or extraction
- Antigen
may not have been fixed enough allowing it to be washed
away during processing. Demonstrate antibody labeling by
light microscopy and use the same preparative conditions
for electron microscopic labeling. Some antigens are sensitive
to glutaraldehyde but not formaldehyde. Other antigens may
be masked by other proteins leaving the antigens inaccessible
to the primary antibody, protein A-gold or both, unless
the cells are extracted with detergents.
Primary antibody is not working
- Causes
of this problem may be due to a wrong (i.e. too weak) dilution
of the antibody. Check this by applying serial dilutions
of antibody to the specimen. Use freshly made working dilutions
for each experiment and do not store diluted antibody, rather,
only make up the amounts needed for each experiment.
Inadequate storage procedures producing repeated freeze-thawing,
or growth of contaminants may also result in a deactivation
of the antibody. Store antibodies frozen in small aliquots
or in 50% glycerol containing 0.01% sodium azide to prevent
contamination. If antibodies must be stored at 4ĄC then
include sodium azide or chloroform to prevent microbial
contamination.
Prepare
positive controls using other methods to demonstrate specific
labeling with the antibodies being used. Change the antibody
if necessary.
- Low
amount of antigen
- One
of the advantages of using protein A-gold to detect antibody
binding is that it can be quantitative. In some systems
the amounts of antigen present will be very low and result
in the presence of only small numbers of gold particles.
Most often an estimation of antigen amounts can be obtained
from biochemical experiments. If these amounts are low then
the actual amount of labeling detected will also be low.
Increasing the signal will be difficult in these cases unless
antigen masking is occurring. Increasing antigen accessibility
by detergent treatment may help.
-
Magnification
of the image is too small to detect colloidal gold particles
- It
sounds obvious, but 5 nm is very small and requires that
the screen magnification in the electron microscope be approximately
18,000x to 25,000x. It is very difficult to see small gold
particles at low magnification. Small gold particles are
also difficult to see at high magnification if the electron
microscope is astigmatic.
- Primary
antibody does not bind protein A-gold
- Many
antibodies do not have binding sites for protein A. If this
is so then include a bridging antibody (one that will recognize
the primary antibody and bind protein A) between the primary
antibody incubation and the Protein A-gold step.
Image contrast is too strong
- Small
gold particles cannot be easily seen on images of resin
sections that have been contrasted with large amounts of
heavy metal stains. To improve the visibility of the smaller
gold particles reduce the specimen contrast as needed. This
can be a problem for sections through resin-embedded material.
The diluted gold preparation has been centrifuged
- Unlike
the primary antibodies, diluted gold suspensions should
not be centrifuged prior to use. Centrifugation will remove
the gold probe from the buffer and result in a dilution
of the reagent. If over centrifuged, or if the gold particles
are large, then most of the reactive probe will be removed
from the buffer. This will result in lower levels of labeling
than expected, the amount of label varying between experiments.
In extreme cases no labeling will be detected.
Background
Label (more gold particles than expected)
Background
labeling is that signal produced by the primary antibody or
visualization probe which is judged to be non-specific labeling.
Possible causes:
- Antibody
preparation
- Many
background problems arise from the primary antibody. Suitable
negative controls will identify this. Suggested control
experiments include
- Labeling
in the absence of primary antibody only.
- Label
with antibodies from the same species as the primary
antibody but which do not react with the cells or tissue
under study.
- Label
cells or tissue that do not express the antigen
- Adsorb
out specific label by incubating the antibody with purified
antigen prior to use. Bands cut from Western blots can
be used for this.
- Adsorb
out possible non-specific label by incubating the antibody
with material similar to the test sample but which does
not contain the antigen. This should remove background
label.
If the antibodies
are producing background labeling then it may be sufficient
to treat the sections with blocking agents dissolved in
PBS to prevent non-specific binding. These include 1%
gelatin (calf skin or fish skin), 2% bovine serum albumin,
5-10% fetal bovine serum or 1% ovalbumin.
Additionally,
specimens that have been fixed with aldehydes can be treated
with primary amines which will quench any free aldehyde
groups which could cross link antibodies. These also can
be dissolved in PBS an include glycine (0.15%) and ammonium
chloride (50 mM). A 10 min incubation is sufficient.
If
background persists then try diluting the antibody a little
more. The best antibody dilution is that which produces
as strong a specific signal as possible with a low a background
signal. Often this means using the primary antibody as
concentrated as possible and accepting some background
labeling.
Background
labeling can also be caused by using sera instead of purified
immunoglobulin fractions. The primary antibodies that
usually produce the best results are affinity purified
IgG fractions.
If
the background labeling cannot be removed then it is possible
that the label is a specific signal. Check the results
with other labeling procedures to confirm this.
Non-specific
binding to resins
- When
using sections of resin embedded material, the primary antibody
or the gold probe may stick to the resin. Determine which
of the reagents is causing the non-specific binding using
control experiments and eliminate by pre-incubating the
specimen with a blocking agent. The ideal blocking agent
and the incubation time may have to be determined empirically.
Background caused by blocking agents
- Sometimes
non-specific binding of protein A-gold can be caused by
using protein A-binding molecules as blocking agents. Rabbit
or pig serum, if used as a blocking agent, will bind protein
A-gold and produce a non-specific signal. Immunoglobulins
will also occasionally bind specifically to blocking agents
(e.g. do not block samples with FCS if using anti-BSA antibodies).
Antigen
migration
- If
the antigen has not been properly immobilized by the fixation
step it may become redistributed throughout the cell prior
to its being washed away. Try a different fixation protocol.
Gold probe dilution
- Background
labeling can be caused by using too high a concentration
of the gold probe that is being used for visulaization of
the antibody binding. Diluting the probe will remove this
background. Some preparations of probe will produce background
if they are not diluted in PBS containing blocking agents.
Addition of a suitable blocking agent will remove this background.
- Background
is specific signal
- If
all attempts to remove background labeling have failed then
it is possible that the signal is specific. Re-examine all
the scientific data.
Contamination
of the specimen
Contamination of
the specimens by dirt can be easily avoided by using filtered
solutions and being scrupulously clean during all the handling
procedures. However, even if the most careful precautions
are taken it is still possible to contaminate the specimens
with fine precipitates which make evaluation of the labeling
impossible. Possible causes.
- Buffers
reacting with specimen grids
- If
copper specimen grids are being used then neither the antibodies
nor the gold probes can be diluted in Tris-HCL buffer. The
HCL will react with the copper. If this is happening then
the antibody droplets will turn blue after the incubation.
Change either the buffer in which the antibodies are stored
or diluted or use nickel or gold grids on which to mount
the specimens.
Some copper grids will react with PBS and produce small
amounts of a fine precipitate over the specimen. This
problem is characterized by a concentration of the precipitate
close to the grid bars. To avoid this, either the source
of the grids can be changed, or grids made from other
metals can be substituted for the copper ones.
- Uranyl
acetate precipitation
- Salt
solutions are used for antibody dilution's and washes. If
these salts are present during contrasting, then the uranyl
acetate will precipitate out of solution. Wash specimens
with water before incubation with uranyl acetate.
Lead precipitation
- Resin
sections (and cryosections to a lesser extent) are often
contrasted with lead salts. Normal precautions should be
taken to avoid precipitation of these salts from solution.
Methyl Celluose
- If
methyl cellulose has been used to support cryosections during
drying, a slightly opaque, globular precipitate sometimes
appears. This may be due to either the methyl cellulose
being (a) uncentrifuged, (b) stored too long, or (c) warmed
prior to use. Make a fresh solution of methyl cellulose
and centrifuge it prior to use.
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