Optimizing immunostaining of archival fish samples to enhance museum collection potential

Immunohistochemistry (IHC) is a powerful biochemical technique that uses antibodies to specifically label and visualize proteins of interests within biological samples. However, fluid-preserved specimens within natural history collection often use fixatives and protocols that induce high background...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta histochemica 2022-10, Vol.124 (7), p.151952-151952, Article 151952
Hauptverfasser: Kwan, Garfield T., Frable, Benjamin W., Thompson, Andrew R., Tresguerres, Martin
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container_end_page 151952
container_issue 7
container_start_page 151952
container_title Acta histochemica
container_volume 124
creator Kwan, Garfield T.
Frable, Benjamin W.
Thompson, Andrew R.
Tresguerres, Martin
description Immunohistochemistry (IHC) is a powerful biochemical technique that uses antibodies to specifically label and visualize proteins of interests within biological samples. However, fluid-preserved specimens within natural history collection often use fixatives and protocols that induce high background signal (autofluorescence), which hampers IHC as it produces low signal-to-noise ratio. Here, we explored techniques to reduce autofluorescence using sodium borohydride (SBH), citrate buffer, and their combination on fish tissue preserved with paraformaldehyde, formaldehyde, ethanol, and glutaraldehyde. We found SBH was the most effective quenching technique, and applied this pretreatment to the gill or skin of 10 different archival fishes – including specimens that had been preserved in formaldehyde or ethanol for up to 65 and 37 years, respectively. The enzyme Na+/K+-ATPase (NKA) was successfully immunostained and imaged using confocal fluorescence microscopy, allowing for the identification and characterization of NKA-rich ionocytes essential for fish ionic and acid-base homeostasis. Altogether, our SBH-based method facilitates the use of IHC on archival samples, and unlocks the historical record on fish biological responses to environmental factors (such as climate change) using specimens from natural history collections that were preserved decades to centuries ago. •Sodium borohydride pretreatment reduced aldehyde-induced autofluorescence.•Successfully immunostained archival samples of various fixative and fixation time.•Larval fish fixed in formaldehyde for ∼65 years was successfully immunostained.•71-year-old archival fish specimen was successfully immunostained.
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subjects Antigen-retrieval
Formaldehyde
Formalin
Immunohistochemistry
Quenching
Sodium borohydride
title Optimizing immunostaining of archival fish samples to enhance museum collection potential
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