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Immunofluorescence and Confocal Microscopy Dr. KW Chan.

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Presentation on theme: "Immunofluorescence and Confocal Microscopy Dr. KW Chan."— Presentation transcript:

1 Immunofluorescence and Confocal Microscopy Dr. KW Chan

2 Part I: Immunofluorescence

3 Learning Objectives §To understand the working principles of immunofluorescence microscope §To understand the difference between direct and indirect immunofluorescence §To know the current use of immunofluorescence studies in medicine

4 Principle of Fluorescence Microcopy

5 Exciter filter

6 Principle of Fluorescence Microcopy Exciter filterBarrier filter

7 Fluorescence microscope §Light source is UV mercury vapor lamp §UV light is filtered to select excitation light to pass through §Excitation light is reflected by a dichroic mirror to strike on the specimen §Emission light passes through the dichroic mirror

8 Fluorescence microscope §Barrier filter blocks the excitation light amid the light path to visualization §Fluorescent labels are visulized against a dark background

9 Auramine for Mycobacterium

10 Fluorescence microscope §The combination of exciter filter, dichroic mirror and barrier filter should be selected according to the fluorochrome label §The 3 components are usually built into a single module called the filter block

11

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13 Epi-fluorescence microscope

14 Transmitted light flurorescence microscope

15

16 The basic principle of immunofluorescence §To use a fluorescent compound (usually fluorescein) to detect the binding of antigen and antibody. §The Ab is labeled with the fluorescent compound and its presence is detected using a fluorescence microscope. §Under a fluorescence microscope, fluorescein appears bright green wherever the binding occurred.

17 Exciter filter

18 The basic principle of immunofluorescence §To use a fluorescent compound (usually fluorescein) to detect the binding of antigen and antibody §The Ab is labelled with the fluorescent compound §Under a fluorescence microscope, fluorescein appears bright green wherever the binding occurs

19 Green fluorescence of FITC

20 Using the fluorescence microscope §Select the correct filter block for the fluorescent compound §Fluorescence fades quickly under UV light; try to limit the time of exposure to UV as much as possible §Use high speed films for photography

21 Direct Immunofluorescence §The aim is to identify the presence and location of an antigen by the use of a fluorescent labelled specific antibody

22 One step Direct Immunofluorescence

23 Two step Direct Immunofluorescence

24 Medical applications of direct IF §Renal diseases for evidence of immune deposition §Skin diseases for evidence of immune deposition §Detection of specific antigens, especially those of infective organisms

25 Application in renal diseases IgG

26 §A section of kidney is placed on a slide; a fluorescein-labeled antiglobulin (specific for IgG, in this case) is added, then rinsed away §The presence of fluorescence in the glomeruli indicates that IgG was deposited prior to the biopsy §IgG is deposited in granular clumps along the capillary walls, enabling a diagnosis of membranous glomerulonephritis in this case

27 §A section of kidney is placed on a slide; a fluorescein-labeled antiglobulin (specific for IgG, in this case) is added, then rinsed away §The presence of fluorescence in the glomeruli indicates that IgG was deposited prior to the biopsy §IgG is deposited in granular clumps along the capillary walls, enabling a diagnosis of membranous glomerulonephritis in this case

28 Direct Fluorescent Antibody Test for the Presence of Immunoglobulin Deposits in Skin IgG

29 §A section of skin is placed on a slide; a fluorescein-labeled antiglobulin (specific for IgG, in this case) is added, then rinsed away §The presence of fluorescence in the upper layers of the epithelium indicates that IgG was deposited in this skin (prior to the biopsy) §The presence of immunoglobulins deposited around keratinocytes is consistent with a diagnosis of pemphigus

30 §A section of skin is placed on a slide; a fluorescein-labeled antiglobulin (specific for IgG, in this case) is added, then rinsed away §The presence of fluorescence in the upper layers of the epithelium indicates that IgG was deposited in this skin (prior to the biopsy) §The presence of immunoglobulins deposited around keratinocytes is consistent with a diagnosis of pemphigus

31 Double labelling Lymphoid tissue: the two Ig light chains are separately labelled.

32 Indirect Immunofluorescence

33 §The aim is to identify the presence of antigen specific antibodies in serum. The method is also be used to compare concentration of the antibodies in sera.

34 Indirect Immunofluorescence §A known antigen is placed on a slide; the patient's serum is added, then rinsed away. §A fluorescein-labeled antiglobulin is added, then rinsed away. §The presence of fluorescence over the antigen indicates the presence of antibodies to this antigen in the patient.

35 Diagnosis of Bacterial Diseases §Clostridial diseases (direct) §Brucella canis (indirect) §Afipia catei, cat scratch disease (indirect) §Borrelia burgdorferi (indirect) §Coxiella burnetii, Q Fever (indirect) §Rickettsia rickettsiae, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (indirect)

36 Diagnosis of Viral Diseases §rabies virus (direct) §bovine immunodeficiency-like virus (indirect) §canine coronavirus (indirect) §canine distemper (indirect) §feline infectious peritonitis (corona-) virus (direct) §porcine respiratory and reproductive syndrome (indirect)

37 Diagnosis of Protozoal Diseases §Babesia species (indirect) §Ehrlichia species (indirect) §Toxoplasma gondii (indirect) §Trypanosoma cruzi (indirect) §Cryptosporidia/Giardia (direct) §Encephalitozoon cuniculi (indirect) §Neosporum caninum (direct, indirect)

38 Some examples Indirect Immunofluorescence

39 Indirect Fluorescent Antibody Test for Antibodies to Toxoplasma gondii

40 §Toxoplasma organisms are killed and placed on the slide; the patient’s serum is added, then washed away. §A fluorescein-labeled antiglobulin is added, then washed away. §The presence of the green fluorescence outlining the T. gondii organisms indicates the presence of antibodies in the patient's serum.

41 Indirect Fluorescent Antibody Test for Antibodies to Toxoplasma gondii

42 Immune-Mediated Disorders §antinuclear antibody (ANA) test (for diagnosis of systemic lupus erythematosus) §Direct fluorescent antibody test for deposition of Abs in tissues, e.g. kidney, skin

43 Indirect Fluorescent Antibody Test for Antinuclear Antibodies

44 §Cells from a cultured cell line are placed on a slide; the patient's serum is added, then rinsed away. §A fluorescein-labeled antiglobulin is added, then rinsed away. §The presence of fluorescence in the nucleus of these cells indicates the presence of antibodies to nuclear antigens in the patient.

45 Indirect Fluorescent Antibody Test for Antinuclear Antibodies

46 Advantage over Immunoperoxidase §Technically easier (fewer steps) §More sensitive results

47 Drawbacks §Microscope is more costly §Frozen sections preferred §Preparations need refrigeration §Preparations cannot be kept for too long §Quick fading of fluorescence under illumination (bleaching effect)

48 Part II: Confocal microscopy

49 Learning Objectives §To understand the working principles of confocal scanning microscope §To know the current use of confocal scanning microscopy in medical science

50 Principles of confocal microscopy §a focused laser beam serves as a high intensity point source §light reflected or fluorescence emitted by the specimen is allowed to pass through a pinhole that filters light coming from outside (above and below) of the focal plane

51 Principles of confocal microscopy §a sensitive detector (photomultipler) behind a pinhole to measure the intensity of light §the laser beam, the pinhole and detector scan through the specimen to build up an image on a monitor

52 The confocal concept

53 Modes of scanning §Mechanical scanning stage §Beam scanning (by means of mirror) §Combined stage and beam scanning §Slit may be used instead of a pinhole l Shortens time for scanning an area l Direct vision of real color image made possible l At the expense of a lower resolution

54 Use of confocal microscope §Performs optical sectioning of thick samples §Three dimensional image reconstruction §Detects very weak fluorescent signals §Selective photobleaching §Cell ablation

55 Image modalities §Autofluorescence §Single, double or treble fluorescent labeling: l immunofluorescence, in-situ hybridization §Image formed by reflectance intensified with metallic coating e.g. AgNOR, immunogold labeling

56 Application in biomedical science §Growth of small organisms, cells, embryos §Movement of intracellular structures §Change in membrane permeability §3 dimensional reconstruction §Image analysis

57 BIO-RAD MRC-1000 §beam scanning LSM §Zeiss "Axioskop" upright microscope for ordinary bright field transmitted light and epi-fluorescence §argon/krypton laser, 15 mW, wavelengths at 488 nm (e.g. FITC), 568 and 647 nm §reflectance mode §fluorescence mode: l simultaneous recording of 2 channels, ie. For double labels

58 BIO-RAD MRC-1000 §upgradable to 3 simultaneous channels in fluorescence mode §computer-controlled stage motor for vertical motion at 0.5µm per step §performs frame scan, line scan, vertical scan §maximum image size 1024 x 1024 pixels §scanning speed at maximum of 16 frames/s at 768 x 30 pixels, and 1 frame/s at 512 lines

59 BIO-RAD MRC-1000 §beam park function for photobleaching, ablation §computer programs for morphometric analysis, 3-D visualization

60

61 IgG Confocal Confocal microscope gives a clearer image and cleaner background over conventional fluorescent microscope

62 Microphotography for weak signals is much easier with a confocal microscope

63 Microphotography for weak signals is much easier with a confocal microscope Excellent for picking up weak signals

64 Immunofluorescence and Confocal Microscopy Dr. KW Chan

65 Learning Objectives §To understand the working principles of immunofluorescence microscope §To understand the difference between direct and indirect immunofluorescence §To know the current use of immunofluorescence studies in medicine

66 Learning Objectives §To understand the working principles of confocal scanning microscope §To know the current use of confocal scanning microscopy in medical science


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