Accurate Determination of S-Phase Fraction in Proliferative Cells by Dual Fluorescence and Peroxidase Immunohistochemistry with 5-Bromo-2′-Deoxyuridine (BrdU) and Ki67 Antibodies

Author:

Tanaka Rina123,Tainaka Motomi123,Ota Takumi123,Mizuguchi Naoki123,Kato Hiroyuki123,Urabe Shoichi123,Chen Yulin123,Fustin Jean-Michel123,Yamaguchi Yoshiaki123,Doi Masao123,Hamada Shinshichi123,Okamura Hitoshi123

Affiliation:

1. Department of Systems Biology, Graduate School of Pharmacological Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan (RT,MT,TO,NM,HK,SU,YC,J-MF,YY,MD,HO)

2. Department of Pathology, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan (SH)

3. Division of Pathology, Otsu Municipal Hospital, Otsu, Japan (SH)

Abstract

To ensure the maintenance of tissues in mammals, cell loss must be balanced with cell production, the proliferative activity being different from tissue to tissue. In this article, the authors propose a new method for the quantification of the proliferative activity, defined as the S-phase fraction of actively cycling cells, by dual labeling with fluorescence and peroxidase immunohistochemistry using BrdU (marker of S-phase) and Ki67 antibodies (marker of G1-, S-, G2-, and M-phases) after a one-step antigen retrieval. In the generative cell zones of fundic and pyloric glandular stomachs, where the majority of cells were cycling, the authors measured a proliferative activity of 31%. In the epithelium of the forestomach and the skin, where cycling cells are intermingled with G0 and differentiated cells, proliferative activities were 21% and 13%, respectively. In the adrenal cortex, in which cycling cells were sparsely distributed, the proliferative activity reached 32%. During the regenerative process in the skin after a lesion, the proliferative activity increased in proximity to the wound. The present one-step dual-labeling method has revealed that the proliferative activity is different between tissues and depends on the physiological or pathological state.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Histology,Anatomy

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