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Endogenous avidin biotin activity (EABA) in thyroid pathology: immunohistochemical study

BACKGROUND: Immunohistochemical methods based on the high affinity of avidin and biotin (e.g. ABC, LSAB) are characterized by high sensitivity and are widely used for detection of immunologic reaction. However, a non-specific reaction, observed in frozen tissues and in paraffin-embedded material, in...

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Autores principales: Nikiel, Barbara, Chekan, Mykola, Jarząb, Michal, Lange, Dariusz
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2678080/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19351422
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-6614-2-5
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author Nikiel, Barbara
Chekan, Mykola
Jarząb, Michal
Lange, Dariusz
author_facet Nikiel, Barbara
Chekan, Mykola
Jarząb, Michal
Lange, Dariusz
author_sort Nikiel, Barbara
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Immunohistochemical methods based on the high affinity of avidin and biotin (e.g. ABC, LSAB) are characterized by high sensitivity and are widely used for detection of immunologic reaction. However, a non-specific reaction, observed in frozen tissues and in paraffin-embedded material, increasing after heat induced epitope retrieval (HIER), and caused either by endogenous biotin or any another chemical compound with high affinity for avidin, may lead to diagnostic mistakes. The aim of our investigation is to study presence of endogenous avidin biotin activity (EABA) in thyrocytes originating from various thyroid pathological lesions (neoplastic and non-neoplastic). MATERIALS AND METHODS: The immunohistochemical study was performed on paraffin-embedded specimens of surgically resected thyroid tissue from 97 patients with thyroid diseases: 65 patients with papillary carcinoma (PTC), 11 patients with nodular goiter in whom features of benign papillary hyperplasia were found, 9 with lymphocytic thyroiditis (LT), 8 with follicular adenoma, and 4 patients with follicular carcinoma. In PTC immunohistochemical study was performed both in primary tumors and in lymph node metastases. After HIER, incubation with streptavidin from LSAB+ (DakoCytomation) kit was done. RESULTS: Strong cytoplasmic EABA was observed in 56 of 65 (87.5%) PTC and in oxyphilic cells in 8 of 9 cases of LT. Significant correlation between EABA in primary PTC tumor and EABA in lymph node metastases was stated. Normal surrounding thyroid tissues showed absence or weak EABA. Aberrant intranuclear localization of biotin was noted in morules of cribriform-morular variant of PTC. No statistically significant correlation between patient's age, sex, metastases presence and EABA was observed. CONCLUSION: Among thyroid lesions, false positive reactions are highly probable in papillary thyroid carcinoma and in lymphocytic thyroiditis if immunohistochemical detection is used on systems containing (strept)avidin. The most probable reason is the high endogenous biotin content.
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spelling pubmed-26780802009-05-07 Endogenous avidin biotin activity (EABA) in thyroid pathology: immunohistochemical study Nikiel, Barbara Chekan, Mykola Jarząb, Michal Lange, Dariusz Thyroid Res Research BACKGROUND: Immunohistochemical methods based on the high affinity of avidin and biotin (e.g. ABC, LSAB) are characterized by high sensitivity and are widely used for detection of immunologic reaction. However, a non-specific reaction, observed in frozen tissues and in paraffin-embedded material, increasing after heat induced epitope retrieval (HIER), and caused either by endogenous biotin or any another chemical compound with high affinity for avidin, may lead to diagnostic mistakes. The aim of our investigation is to study presence of endogenous avidin biotin activity (EABA) in thyrocytes originating from various thyroid pathological lesions (neoplastic and non-neoplastic). MATERIALS AND METHODS: The immunohistochemical study was performed on paraffin-embedded specimens of surgically resected thyroid tissue from 97 patients with thyroid diseases: 65 patients with papillary carcinoma (PTC), 11 patients with nodular goiter in whom features of benign papillary hyperplasia were found, 9 with lymphocytic thyroiditis (LT), 8 with follicular adenoma, and 4 patients with follicular carcinoma. In PTC immunohistochemical study was performed both in primary tumors and in lymph node metastases. After HIER, incubation with streptavidin from LSAB+ (DakoCytomation) kit was done. RESULTS: Strong cytoplasmic EABA was observed in 56 of 65 (87.5%) PTC and in oxyphilic cells in 8 of 9 cases of LT. Significant correlation between EABA in primary PTC tumor and EABA in lymph node metastases was stated. Normal surrounding thyroid tissues showed absence or weak EABA. Aberrant intranuclear localization of biotin was noted in morules of cribriform-morular variant of PTC. No statistically significant correlation between patient's age, sex, metastases presence and EABA was observed. CONCLUSION: Among thyroid lesions, false positive reactions are highly probable in papillary thyroid carcinoma and in lymphocytic thyroiditis if immunohistochemical detection is used on systems containing (strept)avidin. The most probable reason is the high endogenous biotin content. BioMed Central 2009-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC2678080/ /pubmed/19351422 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-6614-2-5 Text en Copyright © 2009 Nikiel et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Nikiel, Barbara
Chekan, Mykola
Jarząb, Michal
Lange, Dariusz
Endogenous avidin biotin activity (EABA) in thyroid pathology: immunohistochemical study
title Endogenous avidin biotin activity (EABA) in thyroid pathology: immunohistochemical study
title_full Endogenous avidin biotin activity (EABA) in thyroid pathology: immunohistochemical study
title_fullStr Endogenous avidin biotin activity (EABA) in thyroid pathology: immunohistochemical study
title_full_unstemmed Endogenous avidin biotin activity (EABA) in thyroid pathology: immunohistochemical study
title_short Endogenous avidin biotin activity (EABA) in thyroid pathology: immunohistochemical study
title_sort endogenous avidin biotin activity (eaba) in thyroid pathology: immunohistochemical study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2678080/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19351422
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-6614-2-5
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AT jarzabmichal endogenousavidinbiotinactivityeabainthyroidpathologyimmunohistochemicalstudy
AT langedariusz endogenousavidinbiotinactivityeabainthyroidpathologyimmunohistochemicalstudy