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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Immunohistochemical evaluation of the effects of paraffin section storage on biomarker stability.

Journal:
Veterinary pathology
Year:
2014
Authors:
Ramos-Vara, J A et al.
Affiliation:
Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory and Department of Comparative Pathobiology · United States

Plain-English summary

This study looked at how storing tissue samples in different conditions affects the stability of certain markers used in tests. Researchers tested 49 different markers in tissue sections that were stored for varying lengths of time and under different conditions, like in the dark or exposed to light. They found that markers stored in the dark held up better, while those exposed to light lost their effectiveness more quickly, sometimes within just a month. Some markers completely lost their reactivity after being exposed to light, while others showed only minor changes regardless of storage conditions. Overall, the findings suggest that how tissue samples are stored can significantly impact test results, especially when light is involved.

Abstract

Environmental stresses can alter immunoreactivity of biomarkers in stored tissue sections. The effect of temperature and lighting on 49 cellular or microbial antigens was evaluated in 4 serial paraffin sections, cut 12 months, 10 months, 8 months, 5 months, 3 months, 1 month, 3 days, and 1 day before immunohistochemistry. Slides were stored at room temperature (RT) in the dark, at 4&#xb0;C in the dark, at RT under fluorescent light, or at RT with windowpane exposure to sunlight. Immunohistochemistry was performed simultaneously in an automated immunostainer. Immunoreactivity was compared with that in the corresponding 1-day-old section and scored as 4 (<10% reduction), 3 (10%-25% reduction), 2 (26%-60% reduction), 1(>60% reduction), or 0 (no reactivity). Any loss of immunoreactivity was proportional to the tissue section age and was least in sections stored in the dark. Immunoreactivity was only completely lost in light-exposed sections and as early as 1 month for CD45. Other markers with complete loss of immunoreactivity were bovine viral diarrhea virus, CD18 (only with fluorescent light), CD31, CD68, canine parvovirus, chromogranins, and thyroid transcription factor-1. Markers with complete loss after light exposure also had reduced immunoreactivity when stored in the dark, as early as day 3. Eight markers (Bartonella spp, CD11d, high molecular weight cytokeratins, feline coronavirus, GATA-4, insulin, p63, progesterone receptor) had minimal decrease in immunoreactivity, regardless of treatment. In conclusion, light-induced antigen decay (tissue section aging) is antigen dependent and could explain unexpectedly weak or negative immunohistochemical reactions in stored paraffin sections.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23435571/