Immunohistochemical Staining of SOX2
Partial Protocol Preview
This section provides a glimpse into the protocol.
The remaining content is hidden due to licensing restrictions, but the full text is available at the following link:
Access Free Full Text.
Corresponding Organization :
Other organizations : University of Chicago, University of Illinois at Chicago, Johns Hopkins University, Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Variable analysis
- Hematoxylin and eosin staining
- IHC staining with anti-SOX2 (D6D9 rabbit monoclonal, Cell Signaling Technology)
- Staining quantitation conducted by a genitourinary pathologist
- Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded slides
- Deparaffinization in xylene and hydration using graded ethanol washes
- Antigen retrieval using antigen retrieval buffer (S1699 from DAKO) in a steamer for 20 min
- Incubation with anti-SOX2 antibody for 1 h at room temperature in a humidity chamber
- Detection of antigen-antibody binding with Envision+system (K4001, DAKO) and DAB+Chromogen (K3468, DAKO)
- Counterstaining with hematoxylin
- Positive control: Specificity of anti-SOX2 staining using the D6D9 antibody (shown in Supplemental Figure 1)
- Negative control: Not explicitly mentioned
Annotations
Based on most similar protocols
As authors may omit details in methods from publication, our AI will look for missing critical information across the 5 most similar protocols.
About PubCompare
Our mission is to provide scientists with the largest repository of trustworthy protocols and intelligent analytical tools, thereby offering them extensive information to design robust protocols aimed at minimizing the risk of failures.
We believe that the most crucial aspect is to grant scientists access to a wide range of reliable sources and new useful tools that surpass human capabilities.
However, we trust in allowing scientists to determine how to construct their own protocols based on this information, as they are the experts in their field.
Ready to get started?
Sign up for free.
Registration takes 20 seconds.
Available from any computer
No download required
Revolutionizing how scientists
search and build protocols!