Immunohistochemical Staining of the Mosquito Ear.
Marta AndrésJudit BagiJoerg T AlbertPublished in: Cold Spring Harbor protocols (2022)
Immunohistochemistry has played a major role in improving our understanding of the anatomy and function of the nervous system. The use of fluorescent dyes that label different antigens reveals how biological tissues are built and how interactions between cells take place. Obtaining this information is particularly important in the case of the mosquito ear given its highly complex anatomy. This protocol describes an immunohistochemical technique to stain the mosquito ear. The first steps of the procedure include the embedding of the tissue in albumin-gelatin and its sectioning into thin slices to allow antibody penetration. The immunohistochemical procedure can be exploited to detect protein expression and localization by using antibodies specifically raised against the protein of interest or that recognize epitope tags fused to proteins using genome editing methods.
Keyphrases
- genome editing
- aedes aegypti
- crispr cas
- dengue virus
- induced apoptosis
- zika virus
- minimally invasive
- randomized controlled trial
- cell cycle arrest
- gene expression
- quantum dots
- dendritic cells
- immune response
- living cells
- signaling pathway
- health information
- binding protein
- cell death
- amino acid
- tissue engineering
- small molecule
- bone regeneration