Quantitative immunohistochemistry in the rat facial nucleus with [125I]-iodinated secondary antibodies and in situ autoradiography: Non- linear binding characteristics of primary monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies

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Abstract

Indirect immunohistochemistry is an important routine method in histology and histopathology. Here we have investigated the quantitative aspects of antibody binding to tissue sections, using a range of monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies and the regenerating rat facial nucleus as the experimental model. The in situ binding of primary antibodies was quantified using appropriate [125I]-iodinated secondary antibodies and quantitative autoradiography. The majority of primary antibodies revealed an apparently bell-shaped curve of in situ antibody binding, with the binding increasing up to a specific antibody concentration and then decreasing; similar data were also obtained with enzymatic immunohistochemistry. There was also a close correlation between the quantitative changes in antibody binding during the time course of facial nerve regeneration and those observed with enzyme histochemistry.

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Raivich, G., Gehrmann, J., Graeber, M. B., & Kreutzberg, G. W. (1993). Quantitative immunohistochemistry in the rat facial nucleus with [125I]-iodinated secondary antibodies and in situ autoradiography: Non- linear binding characteristics of primary monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies. Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, 41(4), 579–592. https://doi.org/10.1177/41.4.8450197

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