Nathan T Sheppard, Melissa C Daniel, Noah S Nelson, Alexis Donneys, Steven R Buchman
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引用次数: 0
摘要
H血管是血管生成-骨生成耦合的重要环节,并协调着骨愈合的过程。据报道,在接受放疗的患者中,高达 25% 的患者会因辐射诱发骨折而严重缺乏 H 血管。通过增加 H 血管的增殖,去铁胺(DFO)可重振骨骼损伤的生理反应,加速辐照骨折的修复。因此,H-血管定量是骨愈合组织学分析的一项重要结果测量指标。然而,在福尔马林固定石蜡包埋(FFPE)组织切片中染色 H 血管的优化方案尚未见报道。通过该方案,我们描述了一种染色 FFPE 骨样本的方法,其背景荧光最少,信噪比高。我们对大鼠骨愈合模型中的下颌骨标本进行了检查,这些标本来自一系列骨折情况,包括健康骨(Fx)、辐照骨(XFx)和经 DFO 处理的辐照骨(XFx-DFO)。定量分析显示,与 Fx 组和 XFx 组相比,XFxDFO 组的 H 血管明显增加。通过在各种骨折条件下对 FFPE 样品中的 H 血管进行免疫荧光染色优化,我们为研究人员提供了一种有效的方法,可对辐照骨折胼胝体中的 H 血管进行可靠的成像定量分析。
Optimizing immunofluorescent staining of H vessels within an irradiated fracture callus in paraffin-embedded tissue samples.
H vessels are an essential link in angiogenic-osteogenic coupling and orchestrate the process of bone healing. H vessels are critically deficient in the setting of radiation-induced fractures, which have been reported to occur in up to 25% of patients undergoing radiotherapy. By increasing H-vessel proliferation, Deferoxamine (DFO) revitalizes the physiologic response to skeletal injury and accelerates irradiated fracture repair. H-vessel quantification is therefore an important outcome measure in histologic analysis of bone healing. However, an optimized protocol for staining H vessels in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue sections has not been reported. With this protocol, we describe a method of staining FFPE bone samples with minimal background fluorescence and high signal-to-noise ratio. We examined mandibular specimens in a rat model of bone healing from a range of fracture conditions, including healthy bone (Fx), irradiated bone (XFx), and irradiated bone with DFO treatment (XFx-DFO). Quantitative analysis revealed a significant increase of H vessels in the XFxDFO group compared to both the Fx and XFx groups. By optimizing immunofluorescent staining of H vessels in FFPE samples across a range of fracture conditions, we offer investigators an efficacious means of producing reliable imaging for quantitative analysis of H vessels in an irradiated fracture callus.