Cite as: Cold Spring Harb. Protoc.; 2008; doi:10.1101/pdb.prot5017
| Protocol |
This protocol was adapted from "Ultrastructural Immunochemistry," Chapter 7, in Immunohistochemistry: Methods Express (ed. Renshaw), from the Methods Express series. Scion Publishing Ltd., Oxfordshire, UK, 2006.
INTRODUCTION
In this method for freeze substitution and low-temperature embedding in resin prior to immunogold staining, lightly fixed tissue pieces are cryoprotected by immersion in polypropylene glycol. The cryoprotected tissues are quench frozen and transferred under liquid nitrogen to vials containing frozen methanol or methanol containing uranyl acetate. The vials are transferred to a substitution vessel where the temperature can be controlled and a nitrogen atmosphere maintained. The temperature is raised (typically at 5°C/h to -90°C) and maintained for 24 h. This temperature is cold enough to prevent recrystallization of water and thus tissue disruption, but high enough for movement of water to occur and allow substitution with the liquid methanol. After 24 h, ~90% of the water has been substituted. The substitution medium is replaced and the temperature is raised to -70°C for 24 h. The substitution medium is changed again and the temperature is raised to -50°C. The tissue is impregnated with Lowicryl HM20 over a period of 1-5 d and the resin is polymerized by UV irradiation. Tissue is then sectioned and stained immunochemically with primary antibodies raised against antigens exposed on the surface of the sections, and primary antibodies are visualized by staining with secondary antibodies conjugated to colloidal gold particles. The immunochemically stained sections are contrast stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate to reveal the ultrastructure of the cells, and are finally viewed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). This is the simplest and most versatile of the post-embedding procedures.
RELATED INFORMATION
Ultrastructural Immunochemistry (Skepper and Powell 2008a) describes methods and considerations for the use of immunogold staining, including fixation, controls, resolution, and quantification. The following protocols provide detailed procedures for immunogold staining of various sections for TEM:
For more comprehensive descriptions of the range of techniques available, see Griffiths et al. (1993) and Skepper (2000).
MATERIALS
Reagents
Antibodies, primary (optimally diluted in PBSG)
Antibodies, secondary (optimally diluted in PBSG)
Use a secondary antibody raised against the species of the primary antibody and conjugated to 10- or 15-nm colloidal gold particles.
Prepare a 50:50 mixture of 100% (v/v) methanol and 100% (v/v) deoxygenated HM20 resin (see Steps 10 and 11). HM20 is a low-temperature resin, providing low viscosity at low temperatures.
PBS (1X) containing 30% (v/v) polypropylene glycol
In addition, add 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA) (w/v) if cells are used as the subject of study.
Phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (pH 7.6)
PIPES buffer (0.1 M, pH 7.4)
Prepare a Petri dish containing a few grains of moistened potassium hydroxide.
Sodium chloride (0.9%, w/v)
Tissue (small pieces) or cells of interest
Uranyl acetate (0.05%) in 100% methanol
Uranyl acetate (saturated) in 50% methanol
Equipment
Aluminum foil
Automated freeze substitution device and cryo-prep center (CPC) freezing station (Leica Microsystems)
Centrifuge
Copper block (gold-coated) (optional; see Step 6.ii)
Dental wax (or Parafilm)
Dental wax is used as a clean hydrophobic surface on which to perform immunogold staining of thin sections mounted on TEM grids and floated on small drops of reagents.
Diamond trim tool and 45° ultradiamond knife (Diatome AG)
Forceps (chilled metal or ceramic) and cooled wooden cocktail stick (see Step 7)
Microscope (transmission electron) (FEI Tecnai 120)
Nickel grids (400 mesh)
Tubes (1.5-mL microcentrifuge)
Ultramicrotome (EM UCT; Leica Microsystems)
Vials for frozen tissue
METHOD
Tissue Preparation and Embedding
In this protocol, fixed and cryoprotected tissues are quench frozen by plunging into liquid propane cooled by liquid nitrogen. Adequate freezing can also be obtained using nitrogen slush or even liquid nitrogen for very small samples. Alternatively, monolayers of cells or thin slices can be frozen rapidly, freeze substituted and low-temperature embedded with no chemical fixation at all (Monaghan and Robertson 1990; Skepper et al. 2001), a method suited to antigens that are sensitive to aldehyde fixation (see Fig. 1 ).
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Figure 1. Thin section of a Vero cell infected with human papilloma virus. Cells were quench frozen in melting propane cooled in liquid nitrogen, dehydrated by freeze substitution against pure methanol containing 0.1% uranyl acetate, and low-temperature embedded in Lowicryl HM20. Cells were immunolabeled for glycoprotein D. Gold particles indicate the nuclear membrane and the rough endoplasmic reticulum (arrows) and the membrane acquired by a virus particle (V) that has just budded through the nuclear envelope. Bar, 200 nm. (Reprinted with permission from Scion Publishing Ltd. © 2006.)
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Sectioning and Staining
All nickel grid incubations/rinses should be performed on dental wax.
DISCUSSION
Prior to low-temperature embedding, lightly fixed pieces of tissue should be cryoprotected by immersion in 30% glycerol or polypropylene glycol (Zajicek et al. 1995). The cryoprotectant provides many nucleation sites within the tissue, so that, even when slower freezing methods are used, the small ice crystals formed are unresolvable by TEM at the magnifications used for most immunogold staining studies. The method described here has been used successfully to localize adhesion molecules (Zajicek et al. 1995), which are notoriously labile during fixation and embedding.
REFERENCES
Gibbons, I.R. and Grimstone, A.V. 1960. On flagellar structure in certain flagellates. J. Biophys. Biochem. Cytol. 7: 697–716.[Medline]
Griffiths, G., Burke, B., and Lucocq, J. 1993. Fine structure immunocytochemistry. Springer-Verlag, Heidelberg, Germany.
Monaghan, P. and Robertson, D. 1990. Freeze-substitution without aldehyde or osmium fixatives: Ultrastructure and implications for immunocytochemistry. J. Microsc. 158: 355–363.[Medline]
Reynolds, E.S. 1963. The use of lead citrate at high pH as an electron-opaque stain in electron microscopy. J. Cell Biol. 17: 208–212.
Skepper, J.N. 2000. Immunocytochemical strategies for electron microscopy: Choice or compromise. J. Microsc. 199: 1–36.[Medline]
Skepper, J.N. and Powell, J.M. 2008a. Ultrastructural immunochemistry. CSH Protocols (this issue) doi: 10.1101/pdb.top47.
Skepper, J.N. and Powell, J.M. 2008b. Immunogold staining of epoxy resin sections for transmission electron microscopy (TEM). CSH Protocols (this issue) doi: 10.1101/pdb.prot5015.
Skepper, J.N. and Powell, J.M. 2008c. Immunogold staining of London Resin (LR) White sections for transmission electron microscopy (TEM). CSH Protocols (this issue) doi: 10.1101/pdb.prot5016.
Skepper, J.N. and Powell, J.M. 2008d. Immunogold staining of ultrathin thawed cryosections for transmission electron microscopy (TEM). CSH Protocols (this issue) doi: 10.1101/pdb.prot5018.
Skepper, J.N., Whiteley, A., Browne, H., and Minson, A. 2001. Herpes simplex virus nucleocapsids mature to progeny virions by an envelopment
deenvelopment
reenvelopment pathway. J. Virol. 75: 5697–5702.
Zajicek, J., Wing, M., Skepper, J., and Compston, A. 1995. Human oligodendrocytes are not sensitive to complement. A study of CD59 expression in the human central nervous system. Lab. Invest. 73: 128–138.[Medline]
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