Study of Merkel cells in the dog through the immunohistochemical expression of five different commercial antibodies: comparative analysis

Author

Ramírez, Gustavo A.

Rodríguez, Francisco

Suárez-Bonnet, Alejandro

Herráez, Pedro

Castro-Alonso, Ayoze

Rivero, Miguel

Espinosa de los Monteros, Antonio

Publication date

2018-02-16T12:22:32Z

2018-02-16T12:22:32Z

2018



Abstract

Merkel cells (MCs) are cutaneous specialized cells with a wide immunohistochemical profile, including low molecular weight cytokeratins and various endocrine and neural markers. Differences in expression of these markers may be a consequence of contradictory results in studies of MCs in normal and damaged canine tissues. The present study aimed to compare five different commercial available antibodies developed against cytokeratins 8 + 18 and 20, neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin A, and synaptophysin on formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples of hard palate, cheek skin including sinus hair follicles or vibrissae, nasal planum, and footpads. The antibodies showed great variability with respect to quality and intensity of immunoreactivity to identify MCs. Anti-Cytokeratin 20 antibody is more effective to recognize MCs in the dog skin followed by the antibodies against neuron-specific enolase, cytokeratins 8 and18, chromogranin A, and synaptophysin. There was also a significant difference in intensity of immunoreaction scores between them depending on the location examined. These results represent a necessary basic background for future studies of the role of these cells in normal and damaged canine tissues.


This study was supported by the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport of the Government of Spain (Program for Development of University Pro- fessors and Researchers, BOE 12022000).

Document Type

article
publishedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Antibody; Canine; Comparative analysis; Immunohistochemistry

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1080/09712119.2017.1322089

Journal of Applied Animal Research, vol. 46, núm. 1, p. 417-421

Rights

cc-by (c) Ramírez et al., 2017

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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