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Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, Vol. 45, 327-344, Copyright © 1997 by The Histochemical Society, Inc.


REVIEW ARTICLE

Antigen Retrieval Immunohistochemistry: Past, Present, and Future

Shan-Rong Shia, Richard J. Cotea, and Clive R. Taylora
a Department of Pathology, University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California

Correspondence to: Clive R. Taylor, Dept. of Patholgy, University of Southern California School of Medicine, HMR 204A, 2011 Zonal Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90033.


*   Summary
*Top
*Summary
*Introduction
*Conclusion
*Literature Cited

The antigen retrieval (AR) technique, which is predominantly based on high-temperature heating of tissues, is used as a non-enzymatic pretreatment for immunohistochemical staining of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections. It has been widely applied in pathology and analytical morphology. The existence of a growing body of literature on the AR technique raises a number of interesting issues for the further development of AR. These issues include the use of a "test battery" and the concept of "maximal retrieval" applied to the selection of optimal test protocols for the standardization of AR. (J Histochem Cytochem 45:327-343, 1997)

Key Words: antigen retrieval, immunohistochemistry, microwave, formaldehyde, tissue fixation, antigen-antibody recognition, protein conformation


*   Introduction
*Top
*Summary
*Introduction
*Conclusion
*Literature Cited

Formaldehyde, originally discovered to be a tissue fixative by Ferdinand Blum in 1893, has been used widely to the present day (Fox et al. 1985 Down; Puchtler and Meloan 1985 Down). As a fixative, formalin is made up of commercial concentrated formalin (37-40% solution of formaldehyde) diluted to a 10% solution (3.7-4% formaldehyde). Formalin has several advantages over alcohol, particularly the superior preservation of morphological detail. Because of the long history of the use of formalin as the standard fixative for tissue processing in histopathology, most of the criteria for pathological diagnosis have been established by the observation of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin. For this reason, although many other fixatives exist and some may be superior for immunohistochemistry (IHC), none has supplanted formalin in general use.

The recent development of IHC has provided a revolutionary approach to histopathology in terms of analytical and functional morphology. However, widespread application of IHC has raised a critical issue concerning traditional formalin fixation because most antigens under investigation are influenced significantly and adversely by formalin fixation (Taylor 1979 Down, Taylor 1980 Down, Taylor 1994b Down; Taylor and Cote 1994 Down; Leong and Gilham 1989 Down; Battifora and Kopinski 1986 Down). This problem has proved to be a great challenge to histopathologists attempting to apply immunohistochemical staining to formalin paraffin sections that constitute the daily practice of pathology. A series of technical developments have helped to improve the immunohistochemical method (Taylor and Cote 1994 Down; Elias 1990 Down; Pinkus 1982 Down; Hsu et al. 1981 Down).

The development of the hybridoma technique was a major contribution, serving to facilitate the large-scale manufacture of many highly specific monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) (Kohler and Milstein 1975 Down). The critical importance of rendering the IHC technique suitable for routine paraffin sections was pointed out by Taylor and Burns 1974 Down. The utility of IHC in surgical pathology increased with the use of enzyme digestion (Huang 1975 Down), other pretreatments for unmasking antigens (Kitamoto et al. 1987 Down; Hausen and Dreyer 1982 Down; Elias and Johnsen 1979 Down), and the development of antibodies against formalin-modified antigens (Taylor and Cote 1994 Down; Harrach and Robenek 1990 Down). However, the use of many antibodies for routinely processed paraffin sections continued to be limited in spite of these enhancement techniques and improvements in the detection system (Leong et al. 1988 Down).

With the recognition that formalin fixation causes major chemical changes in antigens by unknown mechanisms, several attempts were made to modify the methods of fixation, and a variety of modified fixatives have been proposed for preservation of certain antigens (Taylor and Cote 1994 Down; Dapson 1993 Down; Elias 1990 Down; Colvin et al. 1988 Down; DeLellis 1988 Down; Larsson 1988 Down; Hopwood 1985 Down). However, no ideal fixative has been found that can be used universally in IHC. In addition, the modified fixatives do not closely reproduce the preservation of morphology achieved by formalin fixation. A change of fixative, therefore, may also mean changing the histopathological criteria employed for diagnosis. A direct consequence would be loss of the benefit of the rich collection of archival paraffin tissues the world over. These were the primary thoughts behind the development of a novel antigen retrieval (AR) technique, to maintain formalin as the standard fixative for both morphology and immunohistochemistry. A key question, in solving this dilemma was whether formalin fixation modified antigens in a reversible or an irreversible manner. Biochemical studies of the chemical reaction between protein and formalin by Fraenkel-Conrat and co-workers in the 1940s (1947,1948a,b) indicated that hydrolysis of crosslinkages between formalin and protein is limited by certain amino acid side chains, such as imidazol and indol, but that these crosslinkages can be reversed by high-temperature heating (120C) or strong alkaline treatment. This observation formed the basis for the development of AR techniques in 1991 (Shi et al. 1991 Down, Shi et al. 1992a Down). A simple method of either heating the routinely fixed paraffin-embedded tissue sections in water or immersing the routinely formalin-fixed, acid-decalcified, celloidin-embedded tissue sections in an NaOH-methanol solution yielded dramatic retrieval results (Shi et al. 1991 Down, Shi et al. 1992a Down, Shi et al. 1992b Down, Shi et al. 1993a Down). The AR technique has been used increasingly and has demonstrated its value in many studies for over 200 antibodies (Taylor et al. 1996 Down; Werner et al. 1996 Down; Boon and Kok 1995 Down; Brown and Chirala 1995 Down; Cattoretti and Suumeijer 1995; Shi et al. 1995b Down; Cuevas et al. 1994 Down; Gu 1994 Down; Gu et al. 1994a Down, Gu et al. 1994b Down; Igarashi et al. 1994 Down; Kawai et al. 1994a Down; Swanson 1994 Down; Taylor and Cote 1994 Down; Cattoretti et al. 1993 Down; Gown et al. 1993a Down; Leong and Milios 1993 Down; McKee et al. 1993 Down; Norton 1993 Down; Suurmeijer and Boon 1993a Down, Suurmeijer and Boon 1993b Down; Shi et al. 1991 Down).

The worldwide use of the AR-IHC has, however, raised some questions concerning the methodology of heating, the factors that influence the AR-IHC, the variety of AR solutions used for heating the tissue sections, limitations and possible false positive staining, and the mechanism of AR. The purpose of this review article is to address several critical issues concerning AR-IHC, including the factors that influence the AR-IHC. Proposals for standardization of AR-IHC through the use of a "test battery" with the concept of "maximal retrieval" are also described, together with our hypothesis of the mechanism of AR.


*   Recent Developments

Methodology
The Effect of Heating. The fact that high-temperature heating is the most important factor for retrieval of antigens masked by formalin fixation was demonstrated by Shi et al. 1991 Down and in many subsequent applications of AR-IHC in pathology (Taylor et al. 1995 Down; Igarashi et al. 1994 Down; Kawai et al. 1994a Down; Lucassen et al. 1993 Down; Suurmeijer and Boon 1993a Down; Malmstrom et al. 1992 Down). Higher temperature in general yields better results of AR-IHC. For example, Kawai et al. 1994b Down found that heating at 90C for 10 min was more effective than heating at 60C for 120 min. Different heating methods have been used for AR-IHC, such as autoclaving (Pons et al. 1995 Down; Bankfalvi et al. 1994 Down; Igarashi et al. 1994 Down; Umemura et al. 1994 Down; Shin et al. 1991 Down), pressure cooking (Miller and Estran 1995 Down; Norton et al. 1994 Down), water bath (Kawai et al. 1994b Down), microwaving (MW) plus plastic pressure cooking (Taylor et al. 1995 Down; Pertschuk et al. 1994 Down), and steam heating (Pasha et al. 1995 Down; Taylor et al. 1995 Down). Again, the temperature achieved by these methods appears to be the critical variable.

Recently, we conducted a test to demonstrate that an optimal result of AR-IHC is correlated with the product of heating temperature (T) x time of AR heating treatment (t); "T x t" means the heating condition. For example, the lower the temperature of heating used for AR, the longer the time required to reach the same intensity of AR-IHC compared with that obtained by higher-temperature heating. Our test was based on AR-IHC of MAb MIB1 in archival paraffin sections, and obtained the same strong intensity by the following heating conditions: 100C for 20 min, 90C for 30 min, 80C for 50 min, and 70C for 10 hr (Shi et al. 1995c Down; Taylor et al. 1995 Down).

The Effect of pH. Another important factor is the pH of the AR solution (Shi et al. 1995a Down; Evers and Uylings 1994a Down). Although some antigens yield satisfactory results by AR treatment with the use of distilled water, other antigens require heating in buffers of specific pH to obtain the strongest intensity of staining. A few antigens yielded satisfactory results only when buffers in a limited pH range were used. For example, an extracellular immunostaining pattern when the MAb to thrombospondin was used on archival paraffin sections could be achieved only by AR-IHC with the use of low-pH (pH 1-2) AR solution (Grossfeld et al. 1996 Down).

We conducted a study concerning the influence of pH on AR-IHC and observed three distinct patterns of staining: stable type (which changed slightly with pH); V-form type [which gave the best results at extremes (high or low) of pH], and ascending type (which improved with increasing pH). This study was performed using seven buffer solutions. The pH value achieved proved more valuable than the chemical composition of the buffer solution (Shi et al. 1995a Down). On the basis of this study, we recommended the use of AR solution at higher pH value for general application, giving results that are marginally superior to the pH value of 6 in widespread use today. Although the low-pH AR solution may yield the strongest intensity for some antibodies such as ER, PR, Rb, thrombospondin, and MIB1, weak false-positive nuclear staining may also be found in focal areas for some antibodies tested, giving rise to background staining. In these cases, a negative control slide must always be reviewed, and caution must be taken in interpreting the results of the low-pH AR solution.

The Effect of Molarity. Suurmeijer and Boon 1993b Down tested the effect of molarity by using aluminum chloride solution with concentrations ranging from 0.5% to 4% for AR-IHC staining of vimentin on archival paraffin sections. They indicated that the best staining for vimentin was achieved with the use of 4% aluminum chloride. For citrate and other buffers in widespread use for AR, molarity is not a major issue.

The Effect of Metal Ions. The chemical composition of the AR solution may also play a role in AR-IHC. The use of metal salt as the AR solution was based on earlier studies that used zinc-formalin fixation of tissue for better preservation of antigenicity (Jones et al. 1981 Down). We originally speculated that metal salt solutions might play a role in re-fixation of the retrieved antigens, because salt solutions gave better retrieval effects than pure water for some antibodies (Shi et al. 1991 Down). Improved AR-IHC staining by using metal solutions was demonstrated subsequently in a number of studies (Stieber et al. 1996 Down; Gerasimov et al. 1995 Down; Mintze et al. 1995 Down; Gu 1994 Down; Gu et al. 1994a Down, Gu et al. 1994b Down; Kawai et al. 1994a Down; Shin et al. 1994 Down; Spires et al. 1994 Down; Taylor et al. 1994a Down; Lucassen et al. 1993 Down; Merz et al. 1993 Down; Pavelic et al. 1993 Down; Siitonen et al. 1993 Down; Suurmeijer and Boon 1993a Down, Suurmeijer and Boon 1993b Down; Greenwell et al. 1991 Down). Siitonen et al. 1993 Down compared the AR-IHC staining with other antigen unmasking methods, using MAbs to PCNA (19A2 and PC10) on archival paraffin sections of 109 cases of axillary node-negative breast carcinoma. They concluded that the best immunostaining results were achieved using saturated lead thiocyanate with the 19A2 antibody. However, it has subsequently been shown that metal salts are not a necessary component of the AR buffer. Furthermore, the toxic effect of metal salts, particularly lead salts, is a major drawback. Therefore, several alternative AR solutions were subsequently developed, such as citrate, Tris and other buffer solutions, and urea (Kawai et al. 1994b Down; Taylor et al. 1994a Down; Gown et al. 1993a Down; Leong and Milios 1993 Down; Shi et al. 1993b Down; Cattoretti et al. 1992 Down; Gerdes et al. 1992 Down), EDTA or EGTA (Morgan et al. 1994 Down), glycine-HCl buffer (Imam et al. 1995 Down), and periodic acid (Kwaspen et al. 1995 Down).

The AR Solution. Although the chemical component of AR solution may play a role as a possible co-factor in the heating procedure, thus far no single chemical has been identified that is both essential and best for AR. To determine the ideal AR solution, we recommend using a "test battery," because different antigens may require different conditions for retrieval (Shi et al. 1995a Down, Shi et al. 1995b Down; Taylor et al. 1994b Down, Taylor et al. 1995 Down; Evers and Uylings 1994a Down). It may be possible to obtain an equivalent intensity of staining with several different AR solutions if the pH value of the AR solution and the heating conditions are optimized, using the "test battery" method (discussed below). For example, Katoh and Breier 1994 Down found that equally good results of p53 immunostaining by the AR-IHC method can be obtained with either normal saline, citrate buffer, or distilled water. Hazelbag et al. 1995 Down tested a broad panel of MAbs against a variety of keratins on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues with different AR solutions. They concluded that MW heating in either "TUF" or a simple detergent, DET, in a 0.05% solution containing anionogenic (15-30%) and non-ionogenic (5-15%) surfactants (Dish Clean; Bosman Chemie, Heijningen, The Netherlands) before immunostaining could yield similar results. On the basis of our study of AR-IHC and pH (Shi et al. 1995a Down), three types of antigens were demonstrated based on pH values of the AR solution, which was supported by recent studies concerning protein structure, indicating that the complexity of protein structure is not as complex as the function of protein (Wilson 1991 Down; Perutz 1992 Down). Therefore, it is possible to establish several optimal protocols of AR for several corresponding antigens by using the "test battery."

Application
Demonstrated Broad Utility in Surgical Pathology. It has been demonstrated that the AR technique is a simple and effective enhancement method for immunohistochemistry on archival tissue sections. Two major advantages of AR-IHC are (a) reduction of the detection thresholds of immunohistochemical staining (increased sensitivity) for a wide range of antibodies, and (b) retrieval of some antigens, such as Ki-67, MIB1, ER-1D5, bcl-2, androgen receptor, RB, CD5, CD8, CD35, CD38, CD25, CD45R, CD34, CD68, CD44, CD55, VCAM-1, CGA7 (smooth muscle-specific actin), CD19, and thrombospondin (Grossfeld et al. 1996 Down; Cuevas et al. 1994 Down; Cattoretti et al. 1993 Down; Gown et al. 1993a Down; Leong and Milios 1993 Down; Shi et al. 1993b Down, Shi et al. 1996 Down), which are otherwise negative even with other unmasking pretreatment. At present the AR-IHC method is being widely used for the detection of ER, PR, MIB1, p53, bcl-2, pRB, and some CD markers on routinely formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections in daily pathological diagnosis (for review and detailed data see Shi et al. 1995b Down). Recently, Brown and Chirala 1995 Down repeated AR-IHC on archival paraffin sections using 30 antibodies commonly applied in daily pathology, and demonstrated that the AR technique facilitates the immunostaining method for clinically important antigens without adverse affects. The use of the AR technique in routine surgical pathology is meaningful in reducing the incidence of false-negative immunostaining results and thus increasing diagnostic accuracy and improved patient care. A very recent article concerning ER immunostaining on paraffin tissue sections with ER1D5 has demonstrated that the ER detected in archival tissue sections processed with AR and ER1D5 is the best method to provide accurate prognostic information concerning response to endocrine therapies in breast cancer patients, compared to DCC (dextran-coated charcoal method) and immunohistochemistry of the MAb H222 on frozen sections (Pertschuk et al. 1996 Down), and the time that frozen sections used as the "gold standard" may be replaced by archival paraffin sections has come (Taylor 1996 Down). In our immunopathology lab, the AR-IHC of a keratin cocktail (AE1 + CAM5.2) has successfully been adopted for detection of micrometastasis of carcinoma in lymph nodes as a routine method instead of enzyme digestion, which was used previously for enhancement of keratin immunostaining. Our experience revealed that the AR technique is a reliable, simple method for detection of micrometastasis in lymph nodes (unpublished data). The use of AR-IHC yields not only increased intensity of positive staining but often also decreased background. This interesting phenomenon has been demonstrated by Charalambous et al. 1993 Down and in many subsequent studies (Goldberg et al. 1994 Down; Taylor et al. 1994a Down; Gown et al. 1993a Down; Leong and Milios 1993 Down). Some authors reported increased background the AR-IHC staining was performed (Ho et al. 1994 Down). This effect may be caused by use of a higher concentration of primary antibody or detection system. We recommend re-titration of the antibody to obtain the optimal concentration, or the use of a less sensitive detection system, to reduce the background when the AR technique is used for immunostaining. AR-IHC has been applied successfully on cytopathological specimens with a wide range of antibodies, and the same satisfactory results have been obtained, i.e., both improved staining intensity and reduced background (van der Poel and Boon 1994 Down; Boon et al. 1994 Down).

Demonstrated Utility of AR-IHC in Analytical Morphology. Recently, the use of AR-IHC in neuroscience, including anatomy and pathology of the central nervous system, has become an attractive field (Marani and Horobin 1994 Down). Evers and Uylings 1994b Down reported the use of AR-IHC for vibratome sections and tissue blocks of human cerebral cortex stored in formalin for long periods, and obtained satisfactory results by using five commonly used antibodies: parvalbumin, calbindin D28-K, MAP-2, MAP-5, and SMI-32. They developed a protocol of an MW heating AR method for thick tissue slides before vibratome sectioning to avoid wrinkling of the vibratome section, and found that the aluminum chloride solution is the preferable AR solution for the five antibodies tested. The AR-IHC method has been adopted for the detections of MG-160, a sialoglycoprotein of the medial cisternae of the Golgi apparatus, for evaluation of aging in neurons (Lucassen et al. 1993 Down), neuronal and glial polypeptides during human cerebellar development (Yachnis et al. 1993 Down), a marker of axonal injury, ß-amyloid precursor protein (Sherriff et al. 1994 Down), Ki-67 immunoreactivity in Alzheimer's disease and other neurodegenerative disorders (Smith and Lippa 1995 Down), and differential subcellular localization of neural isoforms of calcineurin (calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase) indicating their different sites of function (Usuda et al. 1996 Down). A series of immunohistochemical studies on routinely processed celloidin-embedded human brain tissue sections using the non-heating AR method (Shi et al. 1992a Down, Shi et al. 1992b Down) has been conducted by Moore et al. 1996a Down, Moore et al. 1996b Down. They demonstrated findings that cannot be obtained by any other approach, e.g., tracing the earliest formation of auditory axonal connections and maturation of the central auditory system using MAbs to neurofilament and microtuble-associated protein (MAP2). Their result of AR-IHC of MAP2 is correlated with a recent publication concerning epitope mapping of MAP2 using the Western blotting method (Riederer et al. 1995 Down). The significance of AR-IHC in neuropathology was emphasized by the study of Yachnis and Trojanowski 1994 Down and McQuaid et al. 1995 Down, who demonstrated that AR enhanced detection of neuronal, glial, and other antigens in archival paraffin tissue sections. This should facilitate large, retrospective clinicopathological studies for assessment of the prognostic implications of differentiation in some brain tumors and in other central nervous diseases for better understanding of the biology of these diseases.

The use of the MW heating AR technique for successful immunodetection of androgen receptor was developed in our laboratory (Taylor et al. 1994a Down; Shi et al. 1993b Down) and was subsequently demonstrated by Iwamura et al. 1994 Down, Janssen et al. 1994 Down, and Loda et al. 1994 Down. This has led to further studies on the assessment of potential androgen responsiveness by studying the androgen receptor status in metastatic prostate carcinoma and in prostate needle biopsy specimens and in monitoring the response to anti-androgen therapy. In addition, a series of retrospective studies has been performed on archival tissues to demonstrate the prognostic significance or the potential utility of androgen receptor as a specific marker in the differential diagnosis of metastatic adenocarcinoma with an unknown primary site (Loda et al. 1994 Down). Bremner et al. 1994 Down studied immunolocalization of the androgen receptor in rat testis by the AR technique and demonstrated that androgen receptor immunolocalization in Sertoli cells is stage-dependent. The use of AR-IHC in analytical morpholgy may create a wide field for retrospective studies designed to understand function and pathogenesis. For example, Gown et al. 1993b Down performed a retrospective study on archival tissue of nasopharyngeal angiofibroma by using androgen receptor immunolocalization after AR treatment. They demonstrated a correlation of androgen receptor with the pathogenesis of angiofibroma, confirming the hypothesis concerning the etiology of male angiofibroma (Toomey 1980 Down).

Other Applications of AR. Lan et al. 1995 Down developed a novel, simple, reliable, and sensitive method for multiple (serial) immunostaining based on the MW heating AR technique. The critical technical point of their method is adding an MW heating AR procedure (10 min) between each run of immunostaining to denature bound antibody molecules from the previous run. This is a valuable development in the use of the AR technique, as the complete blocking of antibody crossreactivity by two 5-min periods of MW heating allows the use of a sensitive immunostaining detection system for multiple primary MAbs used sequentially. Another example of triple immunostaining for bromodeoxyuridine and catecholamine biosynthetic enzymes using MW AR was performed by Tisch-ler (1995).

For immunoelectron microscopy, the AR technique has successfully been applied by using the MW heating AR method either after etching the grids with a 10% fresh saturated solution of sodium ethoxide diluted with anhydrous ethanol for 2 min or with a saturated aqueous solution of sodium metaperiodate for 1 hr (Stirling and Graff 1995 Down), or by directly heating the grid and followed by some washing procedures including 50 mM NH4Cl and 1% Tween 20 (Wilson et al. 1996 Down).

The MW heating method was also used for enhancement of mRNA in situ hybridization (Lan et al. 1996 Down; McMahon and McQuaid 1996 Down; Sibony et al. 1995 Down) and for the TUNEL method with the use of short MW heating for 1 min (Strater et al. 1995 Down). However, for the TUNEL method it may have some limitations, as recently reported by Lucassen et al. 1995 Down. They found that the heating method used for enhancement of in situ end-labeling yields strong nonspecific labeling for some briefly postfixed perfused brain or immersion-fixed postmortem brain tissues, although the heating method may benefit other conditions of tissue processing, such as a prolonged postfixation of perfusion-fixed rat brain. McMahon and McQuaid 1996 Down emphasized a combination of enzyme and microwave pretratment for detection of measles virus by in situ hybridization, particularly in long-term formalin-fixed paraffin tissues.

Recently, the AR technique has also been successfully applied to circumvent the loss of p53 antigenicity in stored paraffin tissue sections (Kato et al. 1995 Down).


*   Current Issues

Issues of Standardization
The standardization of IHC is an important issue that involves three areas: antibodies and reagents, technical procedures, and interpretation and reports (Taylor 1994a Down). Perhaps the most difficult issue is the largely unknown but clearly adverse influence of fixation and processing of the paraffin-embedded tissue. Many studies concerning formalin fixation of tissues have shown that the influence of formalin on tissue antigenicity is dependent on the total time of fixation (Battifora and Kopinski 1986 Down; Fox et al. 1985 Down). This raises the next question: How can the immunostaining results on hundreds of paraffin blocks that are fixed in formalin for an unkown time be standardized? As mentioned above, a variety of modified fixatives and processing procedures have been used in an attempt to standardize IHC, but have failed. The AR technique can be used to help standardize IHC on archival paraffin sections (Deluque and Luque 1995 Down; von Wasielewski et al. 1994 Down; Taylor 1994a Down; Suurmeijer and Boon 1993a Down, Suurmeijer and Boon 1993b Down; Swanson 1993 Down). On the basis of the maximal retrieval level, it may also be possible to equalize the immunoreactivity in a variety of archival paraffin tissue sections that are fixed in formalin for various periods of time. In fact, the results of immunostaining on routinely processed tissue using AR are usually equal to (and occasionally better than) the frozen tissue. Several studies have suggested that increased heating may reverse the effects of longer fixation (Munakata and Hendricks 1993 Down).

What is the optimal heating condition and optimal pH value of the AR solution to obtain the maximal retrieval level for AR-IHC with the most commonly used antibodies in pathology? Further studies are necessary to address these questions. The potential effect of the AR technique in standardization of IHC has been indicated by some studies regarding ER-AR-IHC based on comparison between frozen, archival paraffin tissue sections, biochemical assay, and clinical behavior. As an example, a comparison of AR-IHC using antibodies to p53 has been summarized in Table 1. First of all, the necessity of adopting AR-IHC routinely for detection of p53 in archival tissue sections has been demonstrated by all the data shown in Table 1, which demonstrated that the intensity of p53 with the use of AR treatment was much stronger than that obtained by regular immunostaining without AR, the increasing rate ranging from 13% to 42% for PAb 1801 and 34% to 56.4% for DO7. The discrepancies in the increasing rate may be caused by the use of different AR protocols. Our recent experience also indicated the same conclusion, and we have established an optimal protocol for detection of p53 using AR-IHC in diagnostic pathology. Second, the possibility of standardizing the AR protocol was indicated by data reported from three independent research groups (Binks et al. 1994 Down; Lambkin et al. 1994 Down; Terada et al. 1994 Down), showing very similar values of increasing rate, 50%, 56.4%, and 54% for the MAb to p53, DO7, respectively, when using either PBS or citrate buffer solutions at pH 6 to 7 as the AR solutions with MW or conventional heating under similar heating conditions (T x t), although the specimens are different from each group. Third, reevaluation of the cut-off point of p53 is a necessary issue in comparing the increasing rate between the two groups of AR and without AR, with the increasing rate between the frozen tissue section and archival paraffin section. In addition, this increasing rate generated by AR-IHC was larger than that generated by a comparison between frozen and paraffin sections. For example, Barton et al. 1991 Down reported the increasing rate of frozen vs archival paraffin sections as 37% with the use of the polyclonal antibody to p53, CM1, while a higher increasing rate representing the differences between AR and without AR groups by using the same antibody CM1 on archival paraffin sections could be indicated as 47% (Terada et al. 1994 Down). Therefore, the cut-off point of p53, based on different conditions of IHC, may indicate different clinical significances, which need reevaluation as described below. This interesting phenomenon can also be demonstrated when AR-IHC is performed on archival paraffin sections with the use of other antibodies such as ER, PR, MIB1, PCNA, and RB (Shi et al. 1996 Down; Gee et al. 1995 Down; Barbareschi et al. 1994 Down; Battifora 1994a Down). It has been suggested that frozen tissue sections can be replaced by archival paraffin tissue sections with the use of AR-IHC (Battifora 1994a Down). To a degree this is true. However, because the protocols of the AR method are not yet unified, caution should be taken in interpreting the intensity of AR-IHC for qualitative as well as quantitative purposes. To reach the goal of standardization of IHC on routine archival paraffin sections using the AR technique, the following issues may be important.


 
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Table 1. Increasing rate of p53-immunostaining obtained by the AR technique

"Test Battery"
This concept for the development of optimal protocols for AR-IHC is based on previous studies concerning the two major factors that influence the effect of AR-IHC, i.e., heating condition and the pH value of the AR solution (Shi et al. 1995a Down, Shi et al. 1995b Down, Shi et al. 1995c Down; Taylor et al. 1995 Down). Three levels of heating times and three pH values of the AR solution, ranging from low (pH 1-2), middle (pH 6-8), and high (pH 10-11) can be used, as illustrated in Table 2. Recently, we have demonstrated that different heating methods (including MW, MW and pressure cooker, steam, and autoclave heating methods) (Taylor et al. 1995 Down), can be evaluated in a similar fashion and adjusted to yield similar intensities of staining by AR-IHC. In general, there is a correlation between the heating condition and the pH value of the AR solution: When a middle or high-pH solution is used, the higher the temperature, the better the result for most nuclear and cytoplasmic antibodies tested. In contrast, when a low-pH solution is used, intense heating (such as in a pressure cooker) may yield a poor result. For example, the strongest intensity of MIB1 or RB on archival paraffin sections by AR-IHC was generated by either regular MW heating with low-pH solution or by high-pH solution with intense heating (pressure cooker or prolonged regular MW heating method), but not low pH with intense heating (Shi et al. 1996 Down).


 
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Table 2. Test battery suggested for screening an optimal AR protocola

The test battery is a rapid screening approach to develop an optimal protocol for any antibody to be tested. It is an important step in establishing the maximal retrieval level for formalin-masked antigens with a variety of fixation times, to standardize immunostaining results. In our recent study of 14 antibodies using the test battery method, we demonstrated that the strongest intensity of AR-IHC for most antibodies tested was achieved either using low-pH buffer as the AR solution with regular MW heating conditions, or high pH with intense heating conditions (such as autoclave heating or MW heating for a prolonged heating time) (Figure 1) (Shi et al. 1995c Down, Shi et al. 1996 Down). In addition, the use of the test battery may reduce some false-negative AR-IHC staining results. As indicated in Figure 1, positive immunostaining of thrombospondin can be obtained only with the use of an AR solution at low pH.



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Figure 1. Comparison of intensity of AR-IHC by using the test battery for MAb MIB1 on sections of tonsil (A-J) and MAb to thrombospondin on sections of bladder carcinoma (K-T). The AR protocols used are arranged in the following order: pH 1, 100C, 20 min (A,K); pH 1, 100C, 10 min (B,L); pH 1, 90C, 10 min (C,M); pH 6, 100C, 20 min (D,N); pH 6, 100C, 10 min (E,O); pH 6, 90C, 10 min (F,P); pH 10, 100C, 20 min (G,Q); pH 10, 100C, 10 min (H,R); pH 10, 90C, 10 min (I,S); no AR pretreatment (J,T). For MIB 1, the strongest intensity of staining was found in A, B, and G. However, pH 1 showed a low background level of false nuclear staining, and the hematoxylin stain did not take well compared to pH 10, 100C, 20 min (G). Note that citrate buffer of pH 6 yielded a stronger staining of MIB1 than Tris-HCl, pH 6, as previously reported (Shi

Standardization of AR Technique
Heating Conditions. Recently, a variety of heating methods have been applied for AR-IHC. These studies have given rise to some discrepancies in the AR immunostaining results from different laboratories. This is particularly important for quantitative immunohistochemical studies such as MIB1, PCNA, ER, PR, p53, and other prognostic markers. From the standpoint of convenience, economy, and practicality, we recommend the use of MW and a pressure cooker as the common heating method for AR-IHC; this achieves the high temperatures necessary for optimal AR. To monitor the accurate temperature, some modifications of equipment may be required, such as an alarm and/or a manometer or thermometer to indicate the exact temperature in the pressure cooker. In this way, the heating conditions can be standardized no matter the kind of MW oven or the conventional heating method used for heating. When Coplin jars are used with the regular MW heating method, measuring the heating time from the boiling point, or applying the calibration method (Tacha and Chen 1994 Down) may be helpful in standardization.

pH Value of the AR Solution. For the AR solution, we emphasize the critical role of the pH value because we have demonstrated that the citrate, phosphate, and acetate buffers may yield a similar intensity of AR-IHC if the pH value is the same (Shi et al. 1995a Down). Because of the lack of an ideal AR solution at present, the test battery may be the most practical approach to establishing the optimal protocols, including appropriate pH values and heating conditions [which can be monitored by changing the heating time (t) when using the designated pressure cooker].

Reevaluation of the Clinical Interpretation of AR-IHC
To demonstrate the clinical significance of AR-IHC, it is necessary to compare the intensity of AR-IHC with that obtained by routine IHC (without AR) of frozen and paraffin sections and to study the correlations among the three conditions. This type of comparison was, in fact, done in a recent study on Ki-67, MIB1, and PCNA expression on frozen and paraffin sections of breast cancer (Gee et al. 1995 Down). On the basis of the results of AR-IHC, the authors reevaluated the clinical significance, and suggested that a new cut-off point should be applied. Linden et al. 1994 Down, Linden et al. 1995 Down compared the p53 immunoreactivity of three antibodies (listed according to the intensity of staining): DO7 (Dako; Carpinteria, CA), BP53-12 (BioGenex; San Ramon, CA) and 1801 (Oncogene Science; Uniondale, NY), by using the MW AR method. They concluded that wild-type p53 may be detectable in normal cells after using AR, and pointed out the importance of technical conditions as well as the evaluation of normal tissue controls in the clinical application of p53 immunostaining. Goulding et al. 1995 Down performed a comparative study based on two MAbs to ER, 1D5 (Dako) and H222 (Abbott; North Chicago, IL) for both fresh cryosections and archival formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections of 90 cases of breast carcinoma. For the archival paraffin tissue sections with the use of MAb 1D5, the MW AR method was used before immunostaining. The comparison of H score between 1D5 (archival tissue + AR), H222 (archival tissue + enzyme digestion), and H222 (frozen section) showed a significant correlation, although the group of 1D5-AR-IHC showed the highest H score. These authors further calculated the specificity and sensitivity of the ER status in predicting response to tamoxifen therapy based on the UICC (Union International Contre Cancer) criteria for evaluation of clinical reponse to tamoxifen therapy. By comparing the three different "cut-off" H scores of 30, 50, and 100, they found that 1D5 was more sensitive but slightly less specific than H222. They concluded that it was necessary to reevaluate the clinical data with the ER status assessed by a new antibody with the use of the AR technique to establish a valid cut-off point. In a similar study, Pertschuk et al. 1996 Down concluded that paraffin section IHC (with ER1D5) is now the method of choice for evaluation of ER status in predicting prognosis and response to therapy.

One issue that must be addressed is the threshold of p53 nuclear reactivity which should be considered as prognostically significant in cancers, as pointed out by Battifora 1994b Down and by Dowell and Hall 1995 Down. As indicated in Table 1, variable results of AR-IHC for p53 may be obtained with different reagents, methods, and interpretation of AR-IHC used by different authors. What gold standard can be applied to demonstrate the optimal score of p53 or other prognostic markers? Increased intensity of AR-IHC may not correlate with gene status or tumor behavior, and it is therefore extremely important to continually re-assess the results obtained by AR-IHC with the biological parameters and with the clinical outcome.

In summary, using the test battery may help to establish the optimal protocol for the immunostaining intensity of any antibody at a maximal retrieval level. The development of optimal protocols will make it possible to compare results among different laboratories and may provide a meaninful cut-off point for clinical significance after comparison with standard techniques and clinical follow-up.

Remaining Problems and Artifacts
Is there any false positivity of immunostaining after the AR technique is used for immunostaining? This is a critical issue in interpreting the results of AR-IHC. Thus far, most studies have reported satisfactory results, without false positivity, for a variety of antibodies tested (Brown and Chirala 1995 Down; Lavieille et al. 1995 Down; Cuevas et al. 1994 Down; Igarashi et al. 1994 Down; Taylor et al. 1994a Down; Tenaud et al. 1994 Down; von Wasielewski et al. 1994 Down; Cattoretti et al. 1993 Down; Dookhan et al. 1993 Down; Gown et al. 1993a Down; Leong and Milios 1993 Down; Shi et al. 1991 Down). Most recently, Baas et al. 1996 Down questioned whether a potential false-positive result of AR-IHC using the MAb DO7 might be obtained after extreme AR treatment. However, this requires further demonstration by both frozen section and other biochemical assay, since the immunolocalization of p53 in paraffin sections after AR treatment is comparable to the pattern obtained in frozen sections. Some studies have reported nonspecific staining and unwanted immunoreactivity with AR-IHC, using a broad panel of antibodies, particularly by use of different heating conditions and/or different AR solutions with a variety of pH values. For example, some weakly positive nuclear staining was found when a low-pH AR solution was used for the MAb to MIB1 (Shi et al. 1995a Down); Sebenik and Wieczorek 1995 Down showed that the nonspecific nuclear staining after AR was caused by the secondary antibody, because exclusion of the second antibody resulted in no nonspecific nuclear staining in their test. Therefore, re-titration of the second antibody may be necessary if nonspecific staining occurs when AR-IHC is used. Focal keratin staining could be found in archival paraffin sections of malignant melanoma and plasma cell tumor when the MW AR-IHC was used, which may have been caused by the detection of low levels of keratins in these tumors (Guiter et al. 1995 Down). One potential cause of increased background after AR heating may be the unmasking of endogenous biotin, which is also found in frozen tissue sections. This effect can be obviated by use of a routine blocking procedure (Macrea and Towne Poster presentation; 1995 Natl Soc Histotech Ann Symp). It is important to keep in mind that any background staining that may be found in frozen tissue sections can also be found in the MW-heated archival paraffin sections, because the paraffin sections after AR treatment have the same sensitivity or even higher sensitivity than frozen sections.

Mighell et al. 1995 Down recently reported interesting variable patterns of immunoreactivity to an anti-fibronectin polyclonal antibody in routinely processed oral tissues. They indicated that the immunostaining pattern of fibronectin in frozen tissue sections was localized in both connective tissue and around vascular endothelial cells, but was immunolabeled in the vascular region only by the enzymatic digestion method, in connective tissue after MW AR treatment, and in both connective tissue and an unwanted nuclear staining of the epithelium after autoclave AR treatment for archival paraffin sections. It should be noted that the use of a test battery to select an optimal AR protocol is based on a comparison with the immunostaining pattern obtained in frozen sections to avoid any false-positivity or unwanted change of pattern.

Further Development of AR
Heating at Lower Temperature. At present, one of the crucial limitations of the AR-IHC method is that some antigens, particularly surface markers, are still not stained with the use of AR. Lan et al. 1995 Down found that the regular 10-min heating in an MW oven could significantly reduce the intensity of immunostaining for some surface antigens as a result of protein denaturation. This may mean, therefore, that a lower temperature or shorter heating time should be developed for those surface antigens. Recently, we have developed a special protocol for an MAb to p16 based on lower heating conditions with the use of Tris-HCl buffer at pH 1.5 (Chen et al., unpublished data). In theory, it may be possible to retrieve all formalin-modified protein stuctures through a re-modification process, as discussed below, unless the protein has already been lost during fixation or embedding.

Non-heating Method. Non-heating methods for retrieving antigens have a long history in IHC. The simplest non-heating method is immersing the formalin-fixed tissue in water for long periods of time (Puchtler and Meloan 1985 Down). Elias 1990 Down adopted this method routinely by storing de-paraffinized sections in 10% sucrose in PBS at 4C for 16 hr before immunostaining. Subsequently, it was shown that some chemicals, such as urea, acid, or borohydride in water, may improve the retrieval of masked antigens (Larsson 1988 Down; Costa et al. 1986 Down; Hausen and Dreyer 1982 Down). The non-heating AR method of NaOH-methanol solution can be used sequentially with the heating method (Shi and Tian 1993 Down). It has been applied for a series of immunohistochemical studies on human temporal bone sections (Linthicum et al. 1995 Down). Recently, Harkins and Grizzle (Workshop presentation; 1995 Natl Soc Histotech Ann Symp) found that the use of the NaON-methanol solution (Decal; BioGenex, San Ramon, CA) could improve immunostaining of keratin, vimentin, GFAP, desmin, muscle specific actin, S-100, NSE, kappa, lambda, bcl-2, B-cells (L-26), and T-cells (UCHL) in formalin-fixed, acid, or EDTA-decalcified, paraffin-embedded tissues, in addition to celloidin-embedded tissues reported previously (Shi et al. 1992a Down, Shi et al. 1992b Down, Shi et al. 1993a Down). Perhaps, there may be a simple method for non-heating AR by combining the use of acid and alkaline solutions, such as a "hydrolysis" procedure.


*   Study of the Mechanism of AR

AR-IHC has shed some light on our understanding of the mechanism(s) of protein-formalin interactions. First of all, it showed that the modification of protein structure by formalin is reversible under certain conditions, such as high-temperature heating or strong alkaline treatment. We have suggested a possible mechanism of the AR technique, i.e., loosening or breaking of the crosslinkages caused by formalin fixation (Shi et al. 1991 Down, Shi et al. 1992a Down). A recent study by Mason and O’Leary 1991 Down has demonstrated that the process of crosslinking does not result in discernible alteration of protein secondary stucture. Therefore, the AR technique may take advantage of the fact that the crosslinking of protein produced by formalin fixation may "protect" formalin-modified epitopes from denaturation during the heating procedure. Suurmeijer and Boon 1993a Down summarized the possible mechanism of AR as follows: (a) breaking of the formalin-induced crosslinkage between epitopes and unrelated proteins; (b) extraction of diffusible blocking proteins; (c) precipitation of protein; and (d) rehydration of the tissue sections, allowing better penetration of antibody and increasing accessibility of epitopes. In contrast to the "breaking crosslinking" theory, Cattoretti et al. 1993 Down proposed a "protein denaturation" theory on the basis of their observation that some antigens or endogenous enzymatic activities might be lost after heating AR treatment. To understand the mechanism(s) of AR, the first step may be to study the exact alterations in the three-dimensional structure of proteins caused by formalin fixation. Because antigen-antibody recognition is often dependent on the three-dimensional structure of protein, it is likely that the mechanism of AR-IHC may be based on a re-modification of the formalin-modified protein structure.

Crosslinking is a special form of chemical modification of protein (Wong 1991 Down), which can be defined as a process involving the joining of two molecular components by covalent bonds achieved by the use of crosslinking reagents, such as tissue fixatives. Traditionally, the process of tissue fixation has been divided into two stages: the primary reaction is an addition reaction between amine and an aldehyde (e.g., formalin) or ketone (e.g., acetone), R-NH2 + HCHO&Aelig;R-NH-CH2OH, followed by a secondary condensation reaction: R-NH-CH2OH + H2N-CO-R'&Aelig;R-NH-CH2-NH-CO-R' + H2O. Both aldehyde and ketone are carbonyl compounds that can react with amino groups of proteins to form Schiff bases (Wong 1991 Down). This addition reaction of acetone may explain some of the enhancement of AR-IHC for tissues fixed in fixatives other than formalin (Oyaizu et al. 1996 Down; Gown et al. 1993a Down).

The secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structures of proteins are dependent on the primary structure or the amino acid sequence. In general, if the primary structure of protein is still intact it may be possible to recover its original three-dimensional conformation under an optimal retrieval system. Because crosslinkages are complicated processes that depend on a variety of conditions (e.g., pH, temperature, conditions of tissue and fixation), they may lead to a variety of protein alterations (Fraenkel-Conrat et al. 1947 Down,1948a,b; Olcott and Fraenkel-Conrat 1947 Down). Therefore, the use of a test battery is recommended to solve this complicated situation.

Antibodies recognize specific epitopes localized in a particular spatial configuration within the protein molecule. This is particularly true for discontinuous antigenic determinants, which are composed of residues from different parts of the amino acid sequence (Barlow et al. 1986 Down; Atassi 1975 Down). A change in protein conformation caused by formalin fixation may mask the tissue antigenicity. The AR method may lead to a re-modification of the protein structure (induced by high-temperature heating or by non-heating procedures, such as strong alkaline treatment) and reestablish the three-dimensional structure of protein in its native condition, or very close to that state (Figure 2).



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Figure 2. Diagram of our suggested mechanism of AR-IHC. P, protein in the tissue; HCHO, formalin; AR, antigen retrieval; IHC, immunohistochemistry; Ag, antigen; Ag in square, formalin-modified antigen. (1) Future research projects concerning study of mechanism of AR-IHC based on "modification and re-modification." (2) Research projects concerning development of the AR technique, including both heating and non-heating AR methods. (3) Research projects concerning standardization of AR-IHC based on test battery and maximal retrieval level, and reevaluation of the clinical significance of AR-IHC.

This "modification-re-modification" hypothesis has been supported by recent studies. Using MW heating followed by trypsin digestion, Szekeres et al. 1994a Down, Szekeres et al. 1994b Down, Szekeres et al. 1995 Down found a decrease in the nuclear staining of ER and MIB1, which may correspond to a sensitivity of the nuclear Ki-67 to enzyme digestion, as the antigenic structure was modified by MW AR heating in such a way that the epitope was exposed for the subsequent alteration by enzyme treatment. Some studies have demonstrated that if a fixed tissue section shows satisfactory immunostaining without AR it may become worse after AR treatment; the converse may also be true (MacDonald et al. 1995 Down; Tesch et al. 1995 Down). This might mean that if an antigenic structure is formalin-resistant, i.e., without modification after fixation, it may be modified by heating. Therefore, the immunoreactivity may be worse after AR heating unless the antigenic structure is also heat-resistant.

Recently, Morgan et al. 1994 Down suggested a hypothesis concerning the possible mechanism of AR, focusing on tissue-bound calcium ions. These authors suggested that the calcium complex formation with protein in their formalin-fixed state may mask the antigen, which may need a considerable amount of energy, i.e., high-temperature heating and calcium chelation (ci-trate), to release the calcium from this cage-like calcium complex. To test this hypothesis, they added excess calcium ions in a mixed solution of 50 mM CaCl2 with either EDTA, EGTA, or citrate buffer (calcium chelators) as the AR solution for autoclave heating treatment, and obtained a negative staining for MIB1. The same negative result could also be obtained by a sequential use of AR solution and 50 mM CaCl2 solution in heating the tissue sections. They suggest that there is inhibition of AR by either competitive (mixed CaCl2 with AR solution) or noncompetitive (sequential use of AR solution and CaCl2 solution) inhibition. They also tried to repeat the AR procedure after inhibition of CaCl2 and obtained partially recovered immunostaining intensity. When the concentration of CaCl2 was reduced to 10 mM for inhibition, the inhibition of MIB1 staining was completely reversed.

We conducted a test of AR-IHC in the presence of CaCl2, as summarized in Table 3. We found that (a) The same negative staining of MIB1 could be obtained by using CaCl2 alone as the AR solution; (b) not all antibodies showed a negative result, e.g., the intensity of AR-IHC for keratin remained the same after use of CaCl2 (Figure 3); and (c) re-heating the slides in Tris-HCl buffer, pH 1.5, restored a stronger positive staining for both MIB1 and p53. Although the fact that calcium interferes with AR (at least for some antigens) is consistent with the hypothesis that calcium-induced modification of protein may play a role in the retrieval process, it does not prove that binding of endogenous calcium is responsible for widespread loss of antigenicity in formalin fixation. Another issue that arouses suspicion of the calcium-binding hypothesis is the fact that the same intensity of AR-IHC with MIB1 can be obtained by a variety of AR solutions other than ci-trate buffer or with any calcium chelating agents. In particular, a stronger intensity can be produced by using a low pH or a higher pH of Tris-HCl buffer for AR-IHC of MIB1 (Shi et al. 1995a Down, Shi et al. 1995b Down). It is necessary to study the superstructure of protein, particularly the antigenic structure, under various conditions, such as normal (frozen), after formalin fixation, and after AR treatment, to understand the exact mechanism of AR. On the basis of this study, more effective AR techniques may be developed.



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Figure 3. Results of AR-IHC with the effect of CaCl2, as indicated in Table 3. (A) Archival paraffin section of tonsil was heated in 50 mM CaCl2 (resulting in negative staining for MIB1) and then the same slide was reheated in citrate buffer, pH 6.0, for AR-IHC of MIB1, showing weak nuclear staining in the folicle, as indicated in Table 3, line 3. (B) Tonsil section was heated in 50 mM CaCl2 (resulting in negative staining for MIB1) and then the same slide was reheated in Tris-HCl buffer, pH 1.5, showing strong nuclear staining for MIB1 in the folicle, as indicated in Table 3, line 5. (C,D) Comparison of the intensity of AR immunostaining for keratin cocktail on archival paraffin sections of skin between citrate buffer, pH 6.0 (C) and 50 mM CaCl2 used as the AR solutions, showing a similar intensity, as indicated in Tabel 3, line 6. ABC (avidin-biotin complex; Vector) detection system and AEC (3-amino-9-ethyl-carbazole) were used. Counterstained with hematoxylin. Original magnification: A,B x 200; C,D x 100. Bars: A,B = 20 µm; C,D = 50 µm.


 
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Table 3. Test for demonstration of the effect of CaCl2 in AR-IHCa,b


*   Conclusion
*Top
*Summary
*Introduction
*Conclusion
*Literature Cited

Although the AR technique is still in the developmental stage, it has been widely used in immunohistochemical studies. Studies on the mechanism of AR-IHC are ongoing, as are attempts to standardize the AR procedure. Widespread application of standardized protocols for AR may lead to valuable retrospective studies in various fields of pathology. Further studies may examine the practical use of AR-IHC in both diagnostic pathology and analytical morphology. Studies on the mechanism of AR-IHC may create a new field in molecular morphology.


*   Acknowledgments

Supported by the University Pathology Associates of the University of Southern California.

We greatly appreciate Dr Denis G. Baskin's valuable comments and suggestions for this manuscript. We thank Ms Lillian Young and Elisabeth Yee and Mr Moung Win for technical assistance, and Ms Christina Yang for drawing illustrations and composition of the microphotographs.

Received for publication September 9, 1996; accepted September 25, 1996.


*   Literature Cited
*Top
*Summary
*Introduction
*Conclusion
*Literature Cited

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Unmasking the Progesterone Receptor in the Preoptic Area and Hypothalamus of the Ewe: No Colocalization with Gonadotropin-Releasing Neurons
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Estrogen Mediates the Protective Effects of Pregnancy and Chorionic Gonadotropin in a Mouse Model of Vascular Injury
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