Immunofluorescence

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The reactivity of antibodies can vary widely. Also monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies do not necessarily react with the same antigenic form of a component. Because of the low structural resolution of light microscopy it will be more important to preserve the antigenicity of an component. Different fixation procedures can be tried to optimize the immunostaining. The choice of fixatives will also depend on the subcellular localization of the antigen (soluble, membrane bound, cytoskeleton associated). Detergents should be used with caution for membrane bound antigens, while they will be helpful to lower the background of cytoskeletal components. If immunoelectron microscopy has to be carried out, the structural preservation of the cells must be very high. Therefore, glutaraldehyde followed by the proper quenching of the reactive groups should be used.
 

Cell Culture:
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Preparation of cover glasses for immunofluorescence microscopy
Most cultured cell lines need an adhesive surface to grow on.  Cells growing in normal culture dishes can be used for testing an antibody; however, the surface is too uneven for optimal microscopy of single cells (cells are quite often tilted to one side resulting in an uneven focussing).


Cell culture


Fixation Protocols:
Depending on the stability or accessibility of the antigen various fixation protocol can be used.
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(1) Methanol fixation (for cytoskeletal components): The methanol fixation is an easy method; however, it frequently solubilizes and removes membrane bound antigens. By a simple precipitation of the protein, methanol only provides low structural preservation.


(2) Formaldehyde fixation (for membrane associated components):
FA stock solution: Dissolve 16 g paraformaldehyde in about 80 ml dH2O by stirring at 70 oC (in fume cupboard). Add a few drops of 1 N NaOH to depolymerize the paraformaldeyde. Adjust the pH to about 7.0 and check with pH paper). Cool down to room temperature and bring up to 100 ml. Filter through an 0.45 µm Millipore filter and mix with an equal amount of double strength buffer. Divide into convenient aliquots and store frozen at -20oC. Discard after thawing.


(3) Paraformaldehyde/glutaraldehyde fixation (method of choice for double labeling of membrane bound and cytoskeletal antigens):
 Rinse cells with PBS at room temperature.


(4) EGS (ethyleneglycol-bis-succinimidyl-succinate) fixation (method to preserve microtubules and membrane bound antigens):


(5) Fixation of the cytoskeleton: If components of the cytoskeleton are of interest, cell can be extracted prior fixation.


Staining Protocol:
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Optional:


Final Notes:

Double Immunofluorescence:
Click image for original sizeDouble Immunofluorescence is carried out just as single labeling. Antibodies derived from different animal can be mixed and incubated as a cocktail (example: rabbit anti-A and mouse anti-B). The same is valid for secondary antibodies (example: goat anti-rabbit Texas Red conjugated and goat anti-mouse fluorescein conjugated). If secondary antibodies cross-react, they should be pre absorbed against each other or for example with liver acetone powder of the appropriate animal. One might, however, experience a reduction or loss of signal with one of the antibodies, if the antibody binding sites of the primary antibodies are in close proximity.
 

Protein A - Protein G:
Protein A is a cell wall component produced by several strains of Staphylococcus aureus. Protein G is a bacterial cell wall component isolated from group G streptococci. Protein A and protein G bind to the Fc region of most mammalian immunoglobulins (see Table). Protein G has an additional binding site for albumin which can be avoided by using recombinant protein G. Fluorophor-tagged protein A and G provide a very useful detection system for antibodies derived from different animals systems.
 

Avidin - Biotin:
Avidin is a tetrameric protein originally isolated from chicken egg white with a MW of  about 67K and an isoelectric point of about 10. One mole Avidin will bind four mole biotin. The high pI of Avidin can cause binding to acidic structures such as DNA. Biotin is a naturally occurring vitamin with a MW of 244.31 and an isoelectric point of 3.5. The Avidin-Biotin interaction is the strongest known non covalent, biological interaction (Ka=1015 M-1). The bond formation is rapid and is unaffected over wide range of pH. Streptavidin is a biotin binding isolated from cultures of Streptomyces avidinii. It has Avidin-like binding characteristics; however, it has a MW of about 16K and an isoelectric point of 5-6.



References:
Beesley, J.E. (1989) Colloidal gold: A new perspective for cytochemical marking. Royal Microscopy Handbook #17. Oxford Univ. Press. pp 48.
Blose, S.H. & Feramisco, J.R. (1983) Fluorescent methods in the analysis of cell structure. Cold Spring Harbour Laboratory.
Fujiwara, K. & Pollard, T.D. (1976) Fluorescent antibody localization of myosin in the cytoplasm, cleavage furrow, and mitotic spindle of human cells. J. Cell Biol. 71, 848-875.
McBeath, E. & Fujiwara, K. (1984) Improved fixation for immunofluorescence microscopy using light-activated 1,3,5-triazido-2,4,6-trinitrobenzene (TTB). J. Cell Biol. 99, 2061-2073.
Richman, D.D., Cleveland, P.H., Oxman, M.N., & Johnson, K.M. (1982) The binding of Staphylococcal protein A by the sera of different animal species. J. Immunol. 128, 2300-2305.
Savage, M.D., Mattson, G., Desai, S., Nielander, G.W., Morgensen, S., & Conklin, E.J. (1992) Avidin-Biotin Chemistry: A handbook. Pierce Chemical Company. pp 467.
Wang, K., Feramisco, J., & Ash, J. (1982) Fluorescent localization of contractile proteins in tissue culture cells. In: Methods in Enzymology 85,  514-562.


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Contact: Walter Steffen
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© Dr. Walter Steffen, Sept. 2001

Last modified: Monday, 22-Oct-2001 13:27:33 BST by: Mark Cox