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Spectrin

IHC of Spectrin on an FFPE Bone Marrow Tissue

Description

Spectrin is a cytoskeletal protein that lines the intracellular side of the plasma membrane of many cell types in pentagonal or hexagonal arrangements, forming scaffolds and playing an important role in maintenance of plasma- membrane integrity and cytoskeletal structure. The hexagonal arrangements are formed by tetramers of spectrin associating with short actin filaments at either end of the tetramer. These short actin filaments act as junctional complexes, allowing the formation of the hexagonal mesh.


Spectrin is found in the intracellular side of the plasma membrane of many cell types found in muscles, red blood cells and red cell precursors. Anti-Spectrin antibody is useful in the diagnosis of Erythroid Leukemias.

Antibody Type
Mouse Monoclonal
Clone
RBC2/3D5
Isotype
IgG2b/K
Reactivity
Paraffin, Frozen
Localization
Membranous
Control
Bone Marrow
Storage
Store at 2°-8°C
Stability
2 years

For long-term storage of the concentrated antibody, it is recommended that aliquots of the antibody be frozen at -20°C in glycerol 50% (frost-free freezers are not recommended). Repeated freezing and thawing must be avoided. Dilute using an antibody diluent such as ImmunoDetector Protein Block/Antibody Diluent (BSB 0040 and BSB 0041) or ImmunoDNA Background Blocker (BSB 0103-BSB 0107).

Presentation

Anti-Spectrin is a mouse monoclonal antibody derived from cell culture supernatant that is concentrated, dialyzed, filter sterilized and diluted in buffer pH 7.5, containing BSA and sodium azide as a preservative.

Availability
Catalog No.
Antibody Type
Dilution
Volume/QTY
BSB 5938
Prediluted
Ready-To-Use
3.0 ml
BSB 5939
Prediluted
Ready-To-Use
7.0 ml
BSB 5940
Prediluted
Ready-To-Use
15.0 ml
BSB 5941
Concentrated
1:25-1:100
0.1 ml
BSB 5942
Concentrated
1:25-1:100
0.5 ml
BSB 5943
Concentrated
1:25-1:100
1.0 ml
BSB 5944
Control Slides
 
5
Note: For concentrated antibodies, please centrifuge prior to use to ensure recovery of all product.
References
  1. Sadahira Y, et al. J Clin Pathol. 1999;Dec;52(12):919-21
  2. Nehls V, et al. Am J Pathol. 1993;May;142(5):1565-73
  3. Muller M, et al. J Vet Med A Physiol Pathol Clin Med. 2001;Feb;48(1):51-7
  4. Terada N, et al. J Anat. 1997;Apr;190(Pt 3):397-404

Recommended Immunohistochemical Protocol

Pretreatment
  1. Cut and mount 3-4 micron formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues on positive charged slides.
  2. Air dry for 2 hours at 58° C.
  3. Deparaffinize, dehydrate and rehydrate tissues.
  4. Subject tissues to heat epitope retrieval using a suitable retrieval solution such as ImmunoDNA Retriever with Citrate (BSB 0020-BSB 0023) or EDTA (BSB 0030-BSB 0033).
  5. Any of three heating methods may be used:
    • Electric Pressure Cooker
      Place standoff rack at base of pressure cooker. Add 1-2 inches of distilled water to the pressure cooker and turn heat to high, and incubate for 15 minutes. Open and immediately transfer slides to room temperature.
    • Water Bath Method
      Place tissues/slides in a pre-warmed staining dish or coplin jar containing the ImmunoDNA Retriever with Citrate or EDTA in a water bath set at 95°-99° C. Incubate for 30-60 minutes.
    • Conventional Steamer Method
      Place tissues/slides in a pre-warmed staining dish or coplin jar containing the ImmunoDNA Retriever with Citrate or EDTA in a Steamer, cover and steam for 30-60 minutes.
  6. After heat treatment, transfer slides in ImmunoDNA Retriever with Citrate or EDTA to room temperature and let stand for 15-20 minutes.
  7. Wash slides with IHC wash buffer or DI water.
  8. Continue IHC staining protocol.

Immunohistochemical Protocol

Step

ImmunoDetector
(AP or HRP)

PolyDetector
(AP or HRP)
Peroxidase/AP Block
5 minutes
5 minutes
Primary Antibody
30 minutes
45 minutes
Secondary Biotinylated Link
10 minutes
Not Applicable
AP or HRP Label
10 minutes
45 minutes
Substrate-Chromogen
5-10 minutes
10 minutes
Counterstaining
Time varies with counterstain
Time varies with counterstain