A guide to integrating immunohistochemistry and chemical imaging
David P. Bishop, Nerida Cole, Tracy Zhang, Philip A. Doble, Dominic J. Hare
Index: 10.1039/C7CS00610A
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
Chemical imaging provides new insight into the fundamental atomic, molecular, and biochemical composition of tissue and how they are interrelated in normal physiology. Visualising and quantifying products of pathogenic reactions long before structural changes become apparent also adds a new dimension to understanding disease pathogenesis. While chemical imaging in isolation is somewhat limited by the nature of information it can provide (e.g. peptides, metals, lipids, or functional groups), integrating immunohistochemistry allows simultaneous, targeted imaging of biomolecules while also mapping tissue composition. Together, this approach can provide invaluable information on the inner workings of the cell and the molecular basis of diseases.
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