Fw: [Histonet] CD79 alpha dilemma - ANSWER CORRECTION

2011-05-17 Thread Jan Shivers
Hello everyone - my apologies for posting a partially incorrect answer last 
week.  I was looking at the wrong line on a spreadsheet for CD79a abbreviated 
protocol information and wrote down the wrong HIER information.

What we do here currently with HIER for Biocare's CD79a (clone HM47/A9) on 
dogs, cats, pigs, cows, etc., is unmask antigens using:  0.1M Citrate buffer, 
pH 6.0 in a Biocare Decloaking Chamber.  (High pH retrieval solution does 
expose more antigenic sites, but it damages the tissue more when using the 
pressure cooker method.)  In the past we used high pH retrieval solution when 
doing HIER using a microwave oven (gentler method).

Jan Shivers
UMN Vet Diag Lab


- Original Message - 
From: Jan Shivers shive...@umn.edu
To: Farish, Craig cfar...@csu.edu.au; histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Sent: Friday, May 13, 2011 9:14 AM
Subject: Re: [Histonet] CD79 alpha dilemma


 Hi Craig,
 
 I have found CD79a from Biocare (cat. # CM067C) to stain dog, cat, pig, cow, 
 horse, sheep, and mouse so far.  Have not tried it on other species yet (in 
 other words, I don't have any negative species results to report).
 
 I do have to use HIER with high pH retrieval buffer (Dako; contains EDTA) to 
 expose antigens (in a Biocare Decloaking Chamber/pressure cooker).  Citrate 
 buffer doesn't do the job well enough.  Microwave oven antigen retrieval 
 will also work, but it exposes fewer epitopes than the pressure cooker.
 
 If you have any more questions, feel free to contact me directly.
 
 Jan Shivers
 Senior Scientist
 IHC/Histology/EM Section Head
 Pathology Teaching Program
 University of Minnesota
 Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory
 1333 Gortner Ave.
 St. Paul, MN  55108
 612-624-7297
 shive...@umn.edu
 
 (Confidentiality Notice: This message, together with any attachments, is 
 intended only for the use of the individual or entity to which it is 
 addressed and may contain confidential or privileged information. If you 
 think you have received this message in error, please advise the sender and 
 then delete this message and any attachments immediately.)
 
 
 
 - Original Message - 
 From: Farish, Craig cfar...@csu.edu.au
 To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
 Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2011 8:35 PM
 Subject: [Histonet] CD79 alpha dilemma
 
 
 Hi folks - has anyone out there found a Cd79α clone and supplier which will 
 cover multiple species reliably?
 I can find clones which will stain cats and dogs (and humans), and clones 
 which will cover horses, pigs, cows and primates (and humans, but not 
 opossums for some reason??) but i'm yet to find one which will cross-react 
 with both the large and small animals commonly encountered in a vet lab. I 
 would rather not have to stock 2 versions of the same antibody if I can 
 avoid it.
 Any suggestions would be much appreciated.
 As always, thanks to everyone who contributes to histonet,
 Craig
 
 Craig Farish
 Senior Technical Officer
 Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory
 School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences
 Charles Sturt University
 Boorooma Street
 Wagga Wagga
 NSW 2678
 Australia
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Re: [Histonet] CD79 alpha dilemma

2011-05-13 Thread Jan Shivers

Hi Craig,

I have found CD79a from Biocare (cat. # CM067C) to stain dog, cat, pig, cow, 
horse, sheep, and mouse so far.  Have not tried it on other species yet (in 
other words, I don't have any negative species results to report).


I do have to use HIER with high pH retrieval buffer (Dako; contains EDTA) to 
expose antigens (in a Biocare Decloaking Chamber/pressure cooker).  Citrate 
buffer doesn't do the job well enough.  Microwave oven antigen retrieval 
will also work, but it exposes fewer epitopes than the pressure cooker.


If you have any more questions, feel free to contact me directly.

Jan Shivers
Senior Scientist
IHC/Histology/EM Section Head
Pathology Teaching Program
University of Minnesota
Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory
1333 Gortner Ave.
St. Paul, MN  55108
612-624-7297
shive...@umn.edu

(Confidentiality Notice: This message, together with any attachments, is 
intended only for the use of the individual or entity to which it is 
addressed and may contain confidential or privileged information. If you 
think you have received this message in error, please advise the sender and 
then delete this message and any attachments immediately.)




- Original Message - 
From: Farish, Craig cfar...@csu.edu.au

To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2011 8:35 PM
Subject: [Histonet] CD79 alpha dilemma


Hi folks - has anyone out there found a Cd79α clone and supplier which will 
cover multiple species reliably?
I can find clones which will stain cats and dogs (and humans), and clones 
which will cover horses, pigs, cows and primates (and humans, but not 
opossums for some reason??) but i'm yet to find one which will cross-react 
with both the large and small animals commonly encountered in a vet lab. I 
would rather not have to stock 2 versions of the same antibody if I can 
avoid it.

Any suggestions would be much appreciated.
As always, thanks to everyone who contributes to histonet,
Craig

Craig Farish
Senior Technical Officer
Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory
School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences
Charles Sturt University
Boorooma Street
Wagga Wagga
NSW 2678
Australia
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[Histonet] CD79 alpha dilemma

2011-05-12 Thread Farish, Craig
Hi folks - has anyone out there found a Cd79α clone and supplier which will 
cover multiple species reliably?
I can find clones which will stain cats and dogs (and humans), and clones which 
will cover horses, pigs, cows and primates (and humans, but not opossums for 
some reason??) but i'm yet to find one which will cross-react with both the 
large and small animals commonly encountered in a vet lab. I would rather not 
have to stock 2 versions of the same antibody if I can avoid it.
Any suggestions would be much appreciated.
As always, thanks to everyone who contributes to histonet,
Craig

Craig Farish
Senior Technical Officer
Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory
School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences
Charles Sturt University
Boorooma Street
Wagga Wagga
NSW 2678
Australia
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