To examine the thermal stability of the helical structure of type IV collagen within basement membranes in situ, we have employed indirect immunofluorescence histochemistry performed at progressively higher temperatures using a conformation-dependent antibody, IV-IA8. We previously observed by competition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay that, in neutral solution, the helical epitope to which this antibody binds undergoes thermal denaturation over the range of 37-40°C. In the present study, we have reacted unfixed cryostat tissue sections with this antibody at successively higher temperatures. We have operationally defined denaturation as the point at which type IV-specific fluorescence is no longer detectable. Under these conditions, the in situ denaturation temperature of this epitope in most basement membranes is 50-55°C. In capillaries and some other small blood vessels the fluorescent signal is still clearly detectable at 60°C, the highest temperature at which we can confidently use this technique. We conclude that the stability of the helical structure of type IV collagen within a basement membrane is considerably greater than it is in solution, and that conformation-dependent monoclonal antibodies can be useful probes for investigations of molecular structure in situ.
CITATION STYLE
Linsenmayer, T. F., Gibney, E., Fitch, J. M., Gross, J., & Mayne, R. (1984). Thermal stability of the helical structure of type IV collagen within basement membranes in situ: Determination with a conformation-dependent monoclonal antibody. Journal of Cell Biology, 99(4 I), 1405–1409. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.99.4.1405
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