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This page contains tips for designing and executing multiplex immunohistochemistry (IHC) experiments using the Invitrogen Aluora Spatial Amplification Kits and the Invitrogen EVOS S1000 Spatial Imaging System. For more information on spatial biology, please visit our Spatial Biology Resource Center.
Spatial biology is a field that focuses on studying the location of biomarkers and cell types within tissues and organs. Its main goal is to map the cellular diversity within tissues, enabling the visualization, identification, and analysis of the intricate relationships between cellular location and function. By utilizing spatially resolved cellular phenotyping, researchers can gather a wealth of information about tissue types and their origins.
Traditional IHC approaches are often limited in their ability to detect multiple biomarkers simultaneously. This limitation arises from difficulties in resolving the staining of each target and the partially overlapping spectral signatures of different fluorophores. To detect more than three or four biomarkers, researchers traditionally had to process and analyze multiple consecutive tissue sections separately. However, this approach is not only sample intensive but also introduces the risk of inconsistencies due to differences in technical replication, sample handling, and tissue morphology.
Recent advancements in spectral unmixing approaches and iterative labeling strategies have made it possible to visualize a high number of biomarkers within a single sample. This increased multiplexing capability is crucial for understanding cellular interactions and localization within the context of tissue histology and pathology. Multiplex immunohistochemistry (mIHC) experiments, made possible with spatial workflows, streamline sample processing and data acquisition, resulting in cost-effective and rapid image segmentation and data analysis.
Invitrogen Aluora Spatial Amplification Kits are particularly beneficial for mIHC experiments because they offer robust signal amplification, allowing for the detection of low-abundance targets despite autofluorescence and background noise. Additionally, these kits provide flexibility in the choice of primary antibodies and can help minimize the quantity of primary antibody needed.
In this guide, we introduce a unique approach to fluorescent mIHC using Invitrogen Aluora Spatial Amplification Kits and workflows. With this approach, researchers can achieve up to a 9-plex experiment in a single assay, helping save time, resources, and sample material.
An Aluora dye is a fluorescent reagent that can be deposited onto a tissue sample through an enzyme-mediated reaction. The fluorescent Aluora dyes are resistant to downstream processing of antibody stripping, due to their covalent linkage to the samples, and allow subsequent detection of additional targets without affecting the signal strength or quality of existing labels.
Iterative labeling of individual targets unlocks use of multiple primary antibodies from the same host species which is a major limitation in traditional IHC workflows. In addition, the Aluora workflow can be combined with directly conjugated primary antibodies that are introduced in a final step following the completion of the Aluora dye labeling.
Figure 1. Summary of Aluora dyes available.
The materials required to perform Aluora spatial amplification assays are listed in the table below. Please note that Aluora Spatial Amplification Kits come with all the required reagents to perform the assay. Multiplexing options can be customized by purchasing individual Aluora spatial reagents.
Reagents included in the Aluora Spatial Amplification Kits | Additional reagents needed |
---|---|
Blocking buffer (10% goat serum) | Primary antibodies to your targets specific for IHC (mouse or rabbit host) |
Poly-HRP-conjugated secondary antibody or HRP-conjugated streptavidin | PBS (phosphate buffered saline), pH 7.4 (without calcium, magnesium, or phenol red) (Cat. No. 10010031) |
Aluora dye(s) | 95% ethanol (Cat. No. AC615110010) |
Hydrogen peroxide | Distilled water, highly purified (Cat. No. 15230-147) |
Reaction buffer | Mountant: |
Reaction stop reagent | DAPI counterstain (e.g., NucBlue Fixed Cell ReadyProbes Reagent- DAPI, Cat. No. R37606) |
ReadyProbes Hydrophobic Barrier Pap Pen (Cat. No. R3777) | |
Antigen retrieval reagents: | |
Hydrogen peroxide, 30% w/v (Example: Cat. No. H325-4) | |
Sodium Hydroxide Solution (50% w/w/Certified) (Example: Cat. No. SS254500) | |
Slides, coverslips, slide containers, coverslip sealant |
Designing a successful multiplex IHC experiment with Aluora Spatial Amplification Kits requires careful preparation and attention to detail during the assay. The schematic below summarizes the required steps from assay preparation through image analysis to help ensure optimal results. The following sections will describe each step in more detail. Whether performing manual or automated staining the basic principles and preparation for the assays do not change.
Before beginning, it may be helpful to create a table to record the experimental parameters. A suggested format is below.
Order | Primary antibody | Dilution factor | Aluora dye |
---|---|---|---|
1 | |||
2 | |||
3 | |||
4 | |||
5 | |||
6 | |||
7 | |||
8 |
Before beginning the Aluora spatial amplification assay, prepare the reagents and controls.
1. Pair Aluora dyes to markers of interest
To begin designing a multiplex panel, start by pairing primary antibodies against the markers of interest to the Aluora dyes. When selecting dyes and antibody pairings, please consider:
2. Determine staining order
The staining sequence for the experiment should be based on the biology of the individual targets, extent of antigen retrieval required and co-localization of targets. Please consider the following:
Order | Aluora dye | Relative brightness | Unmixing requirements | Channel |
1 | Aluora 647 | Brightest | None | 647 |
2 | Aluora 488 | Brightest | None | 488 |
3 | Aluora 555 | Bright | None | 555 |
4 | Aluora 430 | Bright | Needs unmixing from 488 | 430 |
5 | Aluora 594 | Bright | Needs unmixing from 555 & 647 | 594 |
6 | Aluora 700 | Dimmer | Needs unmixing from 647 | 700 |
7 | Aluora 750 | Dimmest | None | 750 |
8 | Aluora 514 | Dimmer | Needs unmixing from 488 & 555 | 514 |
3. Optimize primary antibodies
It can be challenging to optimize primary antibodies in terms of both dilution factor and antigen retrieval. Typically, once users have successfully completed their first multiplex panel development, other panels are easier to optimize.
3.1. Determine primary antibody dilutions
For each primary antibody, optimize and stain positive control slides, as you normally would during your IHC protocol development. The optimized primary antibody dilution should yield:
We recommend referring to the dilutions suggested by the primary antibody vendor or as defined through previous IHC validation. For Aluora spatial amplification we recommend diluting the primary antibody at least 5-10–fold more than used for standard IHC. Many primary antibodies can be diluted in the region of 1:1,000 and sometimes even lower concentrations for robust targets. It is recommended to start with a dilution of 1:1,000 and select 2-3 additional dilutions to determine the optimal working concentration. See Table 4 for a working example.
3.2. Ensure antigen survival after multiple rounds of heat-induced epitope retrieval (HIER)
In this assay, HIER is used before labeling with each primary antibody to quench endogenous peroxidase activity, retrieve antigens, and to remove bound antibodies from a target. The Aluora fluorophores are covalently attached to the tissue so consecutive rounds of HIER will not remove the fluorescent label. However, there may be some bleaching of the fluorescent signal. If this becomes significant in some channels, the Aluora dye order may need to be optimized, placing the dimmer channel later in the multiplex order, thus reducing the number of stripping cycles it will undergo.
It is critical to ensure that the antigen can survive the rounds of HIER prior to the application of the corresponding primary antibody to the tissue. For antigens that may be lost with repeated HIER, these should be probed earlier on in the staining sequence.
To control for this, we advise that you perform control slides with the corresponding number of rounds of HIER prior to staining with the primary antibody.
4. Establish controls
Experimental controls are critical in verifying assay results. For the Aluora Spatial Amplification Assay, an unstained control is required. This control should be treated identically to the multiplexed sample without the addition of fluorescent reagents. In addition to the unstained control, each Aluora dye used should have a single-color control.
4.1 Develop single-color control (SCC) slides
Single-color control slides are critical in defining the proper staining parameters for each of the individual antibody and Aluora dye pairings to enable spectral unmixing. These single-color controls should include one Aluora dye per sample, but otherwise treated identically to the multiplexed sample including the same staining order, same stripping, etc. This helps ensure that the SCC have the most representative spectral match to the multiplexed sample. Matching these spectral patterns is key to spectral unmixing and getting the best data from your samples.
It is also critical that all SCC samples are from the same lot of tissue. Tissue handling can significantly alter not only the autofluorescence profile of the tissue slices also relative antigen integrity and accessibility, which in turn, greatly effects the spectral unmixing.
After completing the necessary preparations, proceed to the assay protocol. The Aluora spatial amplification assay steps can be performed manually or with an automated slide stainer.
Step 1. Heat-induced epitope retrieval. Perform heat-induced epitope retrieval according to standard antigen retrieval protocols.
Step 2. Blocking. Quench the endogenous peroxidase activity of the samples with 3% hydrogen peroxide solution and then block samples for non-specific binding using the provided blocking buffer.
Step 3. Primary antibody incubation. Label the tissue with mouse or rabbit primary antibody, or biotin-conjugated primary antibody if using a kit with streptavidin. Dilute the primary antibody to the optimized concentration in blocking buffer and incubate.
Step 4. Poly-HRP secondary antibody incubation. Add 2–3 drops of the appropriate poly-HRP secondary reagent to the tissue and incubate.
Step 5. Fluorophore deposit through Aluora reagent. Apply the working Aluora reagent solution to the tissue and incubate.
Repeat 1–5 for each primary antibody. HIER will remove the primary/secondary antibody complex without disrupting the deposited fluorophore and enable labeling with primary antibodies of the same host species without cross reactivity.
Step 6. Counterstain, mount & image. Perform a nuclear counterstain using standard protocols and mount coverslips using a mountant with antifade properties such as ProLong Glass Antifade Mountant. Analyze the image using the EVOS S1000 Imaging System.
Figure 2. Representation of the cyclic staining process with Aluora Spatial Amplification Kits.
The fundamental principles of Aluora spatial amplification staining and developing a multiplex assay remain unchanged when performed on an automated platform. It is essential to perform the same optimization for multiplex development before beginning the assay. In addition, optimization of samples with the automation platform should be performed. Differences in experimental handling, such as HIER/stripping protocols, can significantly change the staining. Other adjustments may also be required depending on the automated staining platform. Refer to the user guides for your specific platform.
Find more details on performing automated staining in the Automated Multiplex IHC Staining with Aluora Spatial Amplification Reagents and Leica BOND protocol.
Aluora Spatial Amplification Kits are compatible with spectral imagers such as the EVOS S1000 Spatial Imaging System. To acquire images, follow these basic steps:
Selecting primary antibodies
The quality of your staining is directly tied to the quality of the primary antibody being used. If your primary antibody is of poor quality with off-target signals and high background, the signal amplification from the Aluora kits will accentuate these issues, resulting in poor staining quality.
Thermo Fisher Scientific is committed to adopting higher validation standards for the Invitrogen antibody portfolio. Advanced Verification antibodies have had additional specificity tests to help ensure the highest confidence levels in our products. You can identify the products that have already undergone this testing with the Advanced Verification badge. The data supporting the Advanced Verification status can be found in the product specific data galleries. To learn more about our testing standards, please visit Antibody Verification.
Tissue type and quality
The quality of your results is directly tied to the quality of the tissue being used. Assess your tissue for artifacts (damage, tissue folds, etc.) before starting your experiments. Ensure there is enough tissue to run all your samples and controls using one lot of tissue; having multiple lots can cause issues. The Aluora Spatial Amplification Kits have been validated on FFPE tissues at standard thickness (~5-10 μm). The use of other types of tissue fixation or varying sample thickness may need further optimization by the user.
Panel design
Although the protocols for general IHC tissue processing can be similar, there is no universal protocol. Each laboratory will use slightly different preparation methods for their tissues. Tissue processing can be one of the most important parameters affecting staining results, therefore different tissue types and preparations may require different treatments for optimum results. Overall optimization is critical to achieving the best results.
The data image below is an example of the composite image acquired from a 9-plex Aluora spatial amplification assay with the EVOS S1000 imager. Table 4 summarizes the parameters for the experiments including the Aluora dye assignments per markers and dilution factor for the primary antibody. This example demonstrates some of the considerations when designing a multiplex Aluora spatial amplification assay. For example, the Aluora 430 dye is slightly less bright, so it was paired with an abundant target, e-cadherin. Additionally, Aluora 700 dye is a dimmer channel, so it was also paired with the abundant target SMA. Finally, nuclear markers (Ki67, progesterone receptor, p53 and estrogen) are expected to co-localize so they were separated across the spectrum to make unmixing easier.
Figure 3. Invasive ductal carcinoma tissue stained with the 8-plex Aluora spatial amplification assay and DAPI. Imaging and spectral unmixing were performed on the EVOS S1000 Spatial Imaging System.
Table 4. Summary of experimental parameters for 9-plex assay.
Figure 4. Invasive ductal carcinoma tissue stained with the 8-plex Aluora spatial amplification assay and DAPI. Composite image shown on the left and individual unmixed channels shown on the right. Images and spectral unmixing were performed on the EVOS S1000 Spatial Imaging System.
Figure 5. Whole mouse brain tissue stained with the 8-plex Aluora spatial amplification assay and DAPI. Images and spectral unmixing were performed on the EVOS S1000 Spatial Imaging System.
For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.