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result(s) for
"Paraffin"
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High-plex imaging of RNA and proteins at subcellular resolution in fixed tissue by spatial molecular imaging
2022
Resolving the spatial distribution of RNA and protein in tissues at subcellular resolution is a challenge in the field of spatial biology. We describe spatial molecular imaging, a system that measures RNAs and proteins in intact biological samples at subcellular resolution by performing multiple cycles of nucleic acid hybridization of fluorescent molecular barcodes. We demonstrate that spatial molecular imaging has high sensitivity (one or two copies per cell) and very low error rate (0.0092 false calls per cell) and background (~0.04 counts per cell). The imaging system generates three-dimensional, super-resolution localization of analytes at ~2 million cells per sample. Cell segmentation is morphology based using antibodies, compatible with formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded samples. We measured multiomic data (980 RNAs and 108 proteins) at subcellular resolution in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues (nonsmall cell lung and breast cancer) and identified >18 distinct cell types, ten unique tumor microenvironments and 100 pairwise ligand–receptor interactions. Data on >800,000 single cells and ~260 million transcripts can be accessed at
http://nanostring.com/CosMx-dataset
.
Hundreds of RNAs and proteins are imaged in fixed tissue at subcellular resolution.
Journal Article
CODEX multiplexed tissue imaging with DNA-conjugated antibodies
2021
Advances in multiplexed imaging technologies have drastically improved our ability to characterize healthy and diseased tissues at the single-cell level. Co-detection by indexing (CODEX) relies on DNA-conjugated antibodies and the cyclic addition and removal of complementary fluorescently labeled DNA probes and has been used so far to simultaneously visualize up to 60 markers in situ. CODEX enables a deep view into the single-cell spatial relationships in tissues and is intended to spur discovery in developmental biology, disease and therapeutic design. Herein, we provide optimized protocols for conjugating purified antibodies to DNA oligonucleotides, validating the conjugation by CODEX staining and executing the CODEX multicycle imaging procedure for both formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) and fresh-frozen tissues. In addition, we describe basic image processing and data analysis procedures. We apply this approach to an FFPE human tonsil multicycle experiment. The hands-on experimental time for antibody conjugation is ~4.5 h, validation of DNA-conjugated antibodies with CODEX staining takes ~6.5 h and preparation for a CODEX multicycle experiment takes ~8 h. The multicycle imaging and data analysis time depends on the tissue size, number of markers in the panel and computational complexity.
This protocol describes co-detection by indexing, a highly multiplexed imaging technology that uses DNA-conjugated antibodies to image up to 60 markers in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded and fresh-frozen tissues.
Journal Article
Accumulation of chlorinated paraffins in adipocytes is determined by cellular lipid content and chlorination level
by
Škop, Vojtěch
,
Zelenka, Jaroslav
,
Melčová, Magdalena
in
3T3-L1 Cells
,
Accumulation
,
Adipocytes
2025
Chlorinated paraffins (CPs) are environmental pollutants extensively used in industries. While the use of short-chain chlorinated paraffins (SCCPs) has been restricted since 2017, the use of medium-chain chlorinated paraffins (MCCPs) has risen as their replacement. Due to lipophilic character, it can be expected that CPs enter the cells; however, the in vitro accumulation potential of CPs remains poorly understood. In this study, we aimed to explore the ability of SCCPs and MCCPs to accumulate in fat cells. We utilized an in vitro model of mouse 3T3-L1 preadipocytes and adipocytes. Using gas chromatography coupled with high-resolution mass spectrometry operated in negative chemical ionization mode, we determined the intracellular amounts of CPs. These compounds accumulated at rates of 8.5 ± 0.1 µg/g
cells
/h for SCCPs and 7.8 ± 0.3 µg/g
cells
/h for MCCPs when an initial concentration of 120 ng/ml was present in the medium. This rate increased approximately tenfold when the concentration of CPs was raised to 1200 ng/ml. CPs content in adipocytes steadily increased over 5 days, whereas preadipocytes accumulated 15–20 times less CPs. This highlights the importance of cellular lipid content, which was about 12 times higher in adipocytes. Furthermore, we found that the level of chlorine content in the CPs molecules significantly influenced their accumulation. Our results demonstrate that MCCPs exhibit a similar accumulation potential to SCCPs, with lipid content playing a crucial role. As with SCCPs, restrictions on the use of MCCPs in industry should be considered to mitigate their environmental and health impacts.
Journal Article
The mutational signatures of formalin fixation on the human genome
2022
Clinical archives of patient material near-exclusively consist of formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) blocks. The ability to precisely characterise mutational signatures from FFPE-derived DNA has tremendous translational potential. However, sequencing of DNA derived from FFPE material is known to be riddled with artefacts. Here we derive genome-wide mutational signatures caused by formalin fixation. We show that the FFPE-signature is highly similar to signature 30 (the signature of Base Excision Repair deficiency due to
NTHL1
mutations), and chemical repair of DNA lesions leads to a signature highly similar to signature 1 (clock-like signature due to spontaneous deamination of methylcytosine). We demonstrate that using uncorrected mutational catalogues of FFPE samples leads to major mis-assignment of signature activities. To correct for this, we introduce FFPEsig, a computational algorithm to rectify the formalin-induced artefacts in the mutational catalogue. We demonstrate that FFPEsig enables accurate mutational signature analysis both in simulated and whole-genome sequenced FFPE cancer samples. FFPEsig thus provides an opportunity to unlock additional clinical potential of archival patient tissues.
Many archived tumour samples are stored as formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) blocks, but this treatment can impact downstream genomics analyses. Here, the authors derive the mutational signatures of formalin on the cancer genome, and present FFPEsig, an algorithm that can distinguish and correct FFPE mutational signatures in archived cancer samples.
Journal Article
Novel method of paraffin embedding cultured cells and organoids using silicone molds
2025
A major issue facing the field of cellular imaging, immunofluorescence (IF), and immunohistochemistry (IHC) microscopy is antibody quality. One of the main methods of antibody validation is testing on positive and negative control tissues with known expression levels of a given antigen. However, this approach is reliant on availability of tissues and reliable protein expression datasets, which are not always available. In contrast, cultured cell lines often have more extensive and reproducible protein expression data available, are relatively inexpensive to maintain, and can be used to produce knockout lines for more robust and functional validation. Due to the difference in staining protocols between formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues and cultured cell lines, an antibody that works well in cultured cells does not always produce the same results in FFPE tissues. For this reason, there is a need for methods to embed cultured cells in paraffin for antibody testing. Previous methods have been published, but many involve use of sharps, which introduces risk of cuts to the investigator, or embedded in agarose first, which results in a lower density of cells. This paper introduces a method of embedding cultured cells using custom designed silicone molds. These molds allow an easy, risk-free embedding process that results in high density cell pellet blocks which can be used for IF and IHC experiments, as well as creation of cell microarrays. Additionally, the silicone molds can be used to embed organoids for IF and IHC analysis.
Journal Article
Validation of a DNA methylation microarray for 850,000 CpG sites of the human genome enriched in enhancer sequences
by
Esteller, Manel
,
Moran, Sebastian
,
Arribas, Carles
in
5-hydroxymethylcytosine
,
Binding sites
,
Cancer
2016
DNA methylation is the best known epigenetic mark. Cancer and other pathologies show an altered DNA methylome. However, delivering complete DNA methylation maps is compromised by the price and labor-intensive interpretation of single nucleotide methods.
Following the success of the HumanMethylation450 BeadChip (Infinium) methylation microarray (450K), we report the technical and biological validation of the newly developed MethylationEPIC BeadChip (Infinium) microarray that covers over 850,000 CpG methylation sites (850K). The 850K microarray contains >90% of the 450K sites, but adds 333,265 CpGs located in enhancer regions identified by the ENCODE and FANTOM5 projects.
The 850K array demonstrates high reproducibility at the 450K CpG sites, is consistent among technical replicates, is reliable in the matched study of fresh frozen versus formalin-fixed paraffin-embeded samples and is also useful for 5-hydroxymethylcytosine. These results highlight the value of the MethylationEPIC BeadChip as a useful tool for the analysis of the DNA methylation profile of the human genome.
Journal Article
Comparison of whole transcriptome sequencing of fresh, frozen, and formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded cardiac tissue
by
Jacobsen, Stine Bøttcher
,
Andersen, Jeppe Dyrberg
,
Morling, Niels
in
Analysis
,
Biology and life sciences
,
Cardiovascular diseases
2023
The use of fresh tissue for molecular studies is preferred but often impossible. Instead, frozen or formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues are widely used and constitute valuable resources for retrospective studies. We assessed the utility of cardiac tissue stored in different ways for gene expression analyses by whole transcriptome sequencing of paired fresh, frozen, and FFPE tissues. RNA extracted from FFPE was highly degraded. Sequencing of RNA from FFPE tissues yielded higher proportions of intronic and intergenic reads compared to RNA from fresh and frozen tissues. The global gene expression profiles varied with the storage conditions, particularly mitochondrial and long non-coding RNAs. However, we observed high correlations among protein-coding transcripts (ρ > 0.94) with the various storage conditions. We did not observe any significant storage effect on the allele-specific gene expression. However, FFPE had statistically significantly (p < 0.05) more discordant variant calls compared to fresh and frozen tissue. In conclusion, we found that frozen and FFPE tissues can be used for reliable gene expression analyses, provided that proper quality control is performed and caution regarding the technical variability is withheld.
Journal Article