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ANNOUNCEMENTS Help / Review Session Fridays 12:20 Morrill 349 Lab Today: Please read the material for Lab 1! TODAY: Microscopy
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Summary of Staining Approaches to Date 1) Charged dyes stain molecules of opposite charge (basic dye-> negative molecules) 2) Stains/dyes react with specific class of molecules (sugars, lipid) 3) Enzymatic digestion of stained molecules of interest (amylase-> glycogen)
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Staining Techniques Localization (staining) of an Enzyme AB + T AT + B ENZYME generate visible product provide substrate
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Staining Techniques AB + T AT + B Acetylcholinesterase- neuromuscular junction ACETYL CHOLINESTERASE Other stains for ATPases, alkaline phosphatases, and others
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IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY Use of antibodies to detect the presence of specific molecules (antigens) in a tissue. Antibody binds to an antigen. Specific binding site on antigen-->Epitope ANTIGEN ANTIBODY
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IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY Direct Immunocytochemistry: a visible marker is directly attached to an antibody that binds an antigen. The antibody is conjugated to a visible marker. Possible Markers ( ): Fluorochrome Enzyme (HRP) Electron dense molecule ferritin, gold
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Direct Immunocytochemistry Fix the tissue Rinse with saline solution Incubate with conjugated antibody Rinse Mount on slide and view under microscope
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DIRECT IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY ADVANTAGES Specificity Less background staining DISADVANTAGES Low sensitivity if the antigen is present in the tissue in low concentrations. Need to directly conjugate marker to antibody.
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INDIRECT IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY –Primary unlabeled antibody binds to the antigen. –A Secondary labeled antibody binds to the primary antibody.
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INDIRECT IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY –Primary antibody binds to the antigen. –Secondary antibody (conjugated to a visible marker) binds to the primary antibody.
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INDIRECT IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY Fix the tissue Rinse Incubate with unlabeled primary antibody Rinse Incubate with labeled secondary antibody Rinse Mount the tissue and view under the microscope
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INDIRECT IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY ADVANTAGES Amplification of the signal Can use labeled secondary with different primary antibodies DISADVANTAGES Nonspecific background may increase Takes longer to do Needs more reagents
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LIMITATIONS OF IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY Cross-reactivity Sensitivity Antigenicity
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LIMITATIONS OF IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY Cross-reactivity Sensitivity Antigenicity -Frozen sections
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Types of antibodies used in immunocytochemistry
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Polyclonal antibodies -A pool of different antibodies recognize different epitopes on the same antigen
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Types of antibodies used in immunocytochemistry Monoclonal antibodies -A single antibody recognizes only 1 epitope
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Types of antibodies used in immunocytochemistry Polyclonal antibodies ADVANTAGES: recognize more epitopes in tissue DISADVANTAGES: less specificity Monoclonal antibodies ADVANTAGES: more specific DISADVANTAGES: reduced signal possible
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Antibodies (immunoglobulins) of specific species are used as antigens to generate secondary antibodies. ANTIGEN--> mouse antibody Rabbit anti-mouse IgG Goat anti-mouse IgG Donkey anti-rabbit IgM
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QUESTION: Dr. Reist is studying the distribution of two proteins, FasII and spectrin in neurons. She would like to label both molecules in the same sample using double- labeling immunocytochemistry. She has these antibodies: Primary antibodies:Secondary antibodies: rabbit anti-FasII mouse anti-rabbit-FITC(fluorescein) mouse anti-FasII donkey anti-rabbit-FITC goat anti-FasII rat anti-mouse-Rh (rhodamine) rat anti-spectrin goat anti-mouse-Rh rabbit anti-spectrinrabbit anti-Goat-Rh donkey anti-spectrin What primary and secondary antibodies will successfully distinguish the distribution of FasII and spectrin in the same preparation?
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Primary antibodies:Secondary antibodies: rabbit anti-FasII mouse anti-rabbit-FITC(fluorescein) mouse anti-FasII donkey anti-rabbit-FITC goat anti-FasII rat anti-mouse-Rh (rhodamine) rat anti-spectrin goat anti-mouse-Rh rabbit anti-spectrinrabbit anti-Goat-Rh donkey anti-spectrin
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AUTORADIOGRAPHY Tissue incubation with radiolabeled molecule Fixation and mounting Prep covered with photographic emulsion Exposure and development
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In situ hybridization Labeled DNA or RNA probe Why?
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In situ hybridization Labeled DNA or RNA probe Radioactive tag Digoxigenin Incubation with tissue Autoradiography or Immunocytochemistry
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www-bioc.rice.edu/bios576/immuno/immuno.html
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Whole mount in situ hybridization views on E10.5 mouse embryos with Phox2a (A), En1 (B), Uncx4.1 (C) and Lmx1b (D) RNA-probes. Juha PartanenInstitute of Biotechnology, P.O.Box 56, FI-00014 Univ. of Helsinki
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FOUR TISSUES - Epithelial Tissue - Connective Tissue - Nervous Tissue - Muscle Tissue
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EPITHELIAL TISSUE -covers surfaces -lines cavities -forms glands
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EPITHELIAL TISSUE Functions: 1) protect against abrasion 2) physical barrier 3) transport 4) excretion/secretion 5) sensation
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CLASSIFICATION -Exhibit Polarity Free surface-lumen Apical Basal Lateral -Close cell apposition adhere to one another specialized cell junctions -Attached to a Basement Membrane=Basal Lamina
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-Number of cell layers -Cell shape of surface cells -Specialization of apical surface CLASSIFICATION of EPITHELIA
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-Number of cell layers Simple Stratified Pseudostratified CLASSIFICATION
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Squamous: flat Epithelial Cell Shape
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Squamous: flat width > height Simple squamous: Single cell layer Epithelial Cell Shape Blood vessels- endothelium Body cavity- mesothelium Kidney Lung
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Squamous: flat Stratified squamous: >1 cell layers [Basal cells: stem cells for upper layers.] CLASSIFICATION Skin (epidermis) Mouth & Esophagus Vagina Anal canal
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Keratinized Stratified Squamous Epithelia Skin Anal Canal Apical surface has a hardened layer of dead cells rich in keratin intermediate filaments. provides protection against abrasion and dessication (drying).
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Cuboidal: height of cells = width Simple: (eg. thyroid, ovary, kidney tubules) Stratified: (sweat glands) CLASSIFICATION
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Columnar: height of cells > width Simple: can be ciliated intestine gall bladder fallopian tubes CLASSIFICATION
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Columnar: Stratified: (ducts of exocrine glands) CLASSIFICATION
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Columnar: Pseudostratified: single cell layer that appears stratified; each cell in contact with basement membrane; frequently ciliated Trachea Urethra CLASSIFICATION
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Transitional Epithelium : stratified, domed superficial cells, allows for extension; bladder
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