JoVE 비디오를 활용하시려면 도서관을 통한 기관 구독이 필요합니다.  전체 비디오를 보시려면 로그인하거나 무료 트라이얼을 시작하세요.
Immunohistochemistry to Study the Relationship Between Macrophages and Infiltrated Immune Cells

Immunohistochemistry to Study the Relationship Between Macrophages and Infiltrated Immune Cells

내레이션 대본

Begin with a slide containing formalin-fixed, deparaffinized, and rehydrated temporal artery biopsy sections with infiltrated immune cells, including lymphocytes and macrophages.

Activated macrophages express folate receptor beta or FR-β — a disease-related marker, differentiating the macrophages from other immune cells.

Transfer the slide into a pre-warmed buffer to retrieve surface receptors.

Treat the section with hydrogen peroxide, blocking intracellular peroxidase activity.

Introduce a mix of primary antibodies targeting CD3, CD68, and FR-β, which bind to immune cells expressing these proteins.

Add biotinylated secondary antibodies, interacting with primary antibodies, and wash.

Overlay with streptavidin-conjugated enzymes that bind with biotin.

Treat with a chromogenic substrate that interacts with enzymes, producing localized brown precipitates.

Introduce a counterstain — hematoxylin, staining the nuclei blue.

Microscopically identify small, round, brown-stained cells as CD3-expressing lymphocytes and large, irregular, brown-stained cells as CD68 and FR-β-expressing macrophages.

Quantify macrophages in the section to find their ratio amongst the total infiltrated immune cells.

Related Videos

Read Article