Long-term storage and regular repeated use of diluted antisera in glass staining jars for increased sensitivity, reproducibility, and convenience of single- and two-color light microscopic immunocytochemistry.
Open Access
- 1 June 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry
- Vol. 30 (6) , 504-511
- https://doi.org/10.1177/30.6.6178778
Abstract
A procedure is described for the dilution and storage of antisera in glass staining jars into which whole slides are immersed for incubation during light microscopic neuropeptide immunocytochemistry. Diluted antisera, stored at 4 degrees C and continuously reused, were found to be stable for long periods of time (to date over 3 years), and consistently yielded high quality staining in both single- and two-color immunoperoxidase staining. We found this procedure to be more convenient than conventional incubation procedures, allowing the more rapid processing of large numbers of slides and reducing the loss of slides due to technical errors. The consistency and reproducibility of day to day staining were also improved. The immersion of whole slides into the antisera permitted the use of long incubation times (up to 7 days) without the sections drying out, which in many cases substantially enhanced the sensitivity of the staining obtained. A procedure for two-color immunoperoxidase staining is described using diaminobenzidine for a brown color and alpha-naphthol/pyronin for a red/purple color. We found the alpha-naphthol/pyronin reaction superior to the more commonly used 4-chlornaphthol reaction as a second color. The two-color staining was found useful not only for demonstrating nerve cell bodies stained different colors, but also for staining nerve terminals one color that are around and contacting nerve cell bodies stained another color.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
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