Charles Havnar, Loryn Holokai, Ryan Ichikawa, Wennie Chen, Alexis Scherl, Eliah R Shamir
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Organoids are in vitro tissue models derived from human or animal primary tissues or stem cells that allow for studying three-dimensional (3D) tissue biology, toxicity testing, biomarker evaluation, and assessment of compound efficacy, supplementing or potentially minimizing use of animal models. Organoids are typically cultured in a 3D format within an extracellular matrix and, at the end of an experiment, can be further processed for various cellular or molecular readouts. Analysis often relies on whole mount immunolabeling for markers of interest, which consumes the entire sample/well, thereby limiting sample availability for downstream assays. In addition, 3D cultures become more friable after fixation and are susceptible to sample loss during washing steps. In contrast, by fixing and processing organoids to a paraffin block, dozens or hundreds of unstained slides can be generated, enabling robust characterization via multiple assays, including histologic evaluation and (immuno)histochemical stains, thus maximizing the yield of these time- and labor-intensive cultures. Here we describe three methods to process 3D Matrigel cultures into paraffin blocks using Histogel as an embedding agent. The three techniques all yield high-quality sections but vary in complexity of implementation at different steps, and their application for different use cases is discussed.
期刊介绍:
The official journal of the National Society for Histotechnology, Journal of Histotechnology, aims to advance the understanding of complex biological systems and improve patient care by applying histotechniques to diagnose, prevent and treat diseases.
Journal of Histotechnology is concerned with educating practitioners and researchers from diverse disciplines about the methods used to prepare tissues and cell types, from all species, for microscopic examination. This is especially relevant to Histotechnicians.
Journal of Histotechnology welcomes research addressing new, improved, or traditional techniques for tissue and cell preparation. This includes review articles, original articles, technical notes, case studies, advances in technology, and letters to editors.
Topics may include, but are not limited to, discussion of clinical, veterinary, and research histopathology.