Publication: Optimisation and validation of
immunohistochemistry protocols for cancer research
Authors
Ella-tongwiis, Peter ; Makanga, Alexander ; Shergill, Iqbal ; Hughes, Stephen Fôn
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Publisher
Universidad de Murcia, Departamento de Biologia Celular e Histiologia
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.14670/HH-18-317
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
Background. Immunohistochemistry (IHC)
has become a valuable laboratory technique for
diagnosing, evaluating metastasis and informing
treatment selection in several cancers. Standardization
however remains a limiting factor in IHC. The main aim
of this research study was to optimise, validate and
standardize antibodies and IHC protocols for cancer
research.
Methods. Seven monoclonal mouse and rabbit
antibodies were optimised using formalin-fixed paraffin
embedded (FFPE) human tissue blocks. 4um sections of
FFPE block were stained using the Roche Ventana XT or
Ventana ULTRA IHC automated analysers. This study
modified manufacturer recommended protocols by using
a unique antigen retrieval method, adding an
amplification step, varying primary antibody incubation
times, as well as using the Roche Ventana Ultraview
detection system.
Results. Optimum antibody localisation was
observed in modified IHC protocols in comparison with
manufacturer recommended protocols for antiCEACAM-1, anti-CD31, anti-COX-2, anti-HER-2/neu,
anti-S100P, anti-thrombomodulin and anti-VEGFR-3.
Majority of antibodies required more than one
modification of the initial protocol. For anti-VEGFR-3
optimum staining was observed following 4 protocol
modifications.
Conclusions. This study has optimised and
standardized several tissue-based biomarkers that may
be, in the future, used to screen, diagnose and monitor
patients with certain cancer, such as bladder cancer.
Accurate data on optimised protocols reduce time and
resources wasted on experimental protocols, and
ultimately help identify biomarkers or biomarker panels,
which may be used to select treatment regimens for
various cancers.
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Citation
Histology and Histopathology Vol. 36, nº4 (2021)
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