Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1923709 | Acta Histochemica | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Improvements in reagents and protocols for immunohistochemistry have led to increased sensitivity of detection systems. A significant level of signal amplification was achieved by the chain-polymer conjugate technology utilizing enzyme-labeled inert “backbone” molecule of dextran (Dako). However, the relatively large size of the dextran molecule in aqueous phase appears to create spatial hindrance compromising the penetrative ability of the detection reagent. Novel AmpliStain⢠detection systems (SDT GmbH, Baesweiler, Germany) seem to overcome these constraints offering a more compact and deformable conjugate design that facilitates agile penetration through the narrowest diffusion pathways in tissue sections. Here, we compared the level of signal amplification achievable with AmpliStainâ¢-HRP (SDT) and EnVisionâ¢+-HRP (Dako). Our results show that the AmpliStainâ¢-HRP systems allow higher dilutions of primary antibodies in both immunohistochemistry and ELISA. Compared with EnVisionâ¢+, anti-mouse AmpliStain⢠enables at least three times more sensitive detection of mouse antibodies, whereas anti-rabbit AmpliStain⢠is ten times more sensitive than anti-rabbit EnVisionâ¢+.
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Authors
Igor Buchwalow, Werner Boecker, Eduard Wolf, Vera Samoilova, Markus Tiemann,