The present study was designed to evaluate the efficacy of different
microwave pretreatment methods to retrieve microtubule-associated
protein 2 (MAP-2) immunoreactivity in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded
guinea pig brain sections. Brain sections, microwave pretreated in
boiling sodium citrate, citric acid, Tris hydrochloride, and EDTA
buffers of pH 4, 6, and 8, were labeled with four different clones of
MAP-2 monoclonal antibodies. No MAP-2 immunoreactivity was observed in
control sections processed without microwave pretreatment. Optimal
MAP-2 immunoreactivity was observed only when MAP-2 antibody clone AP18
was used in conjunction with citric acid buffer of pH 6.0. Using this
combination, brain sections from nerve agent soman-exposed guinea pigs
were found to exhibit marked reduction in MAP-2 immunostaining in the
hippocampus. These observations suggest that the clone of the antibody
in addition to the type and pH of antigen retrieval (AR) solution are
important variables to be considered for establishing an optimal AR
technique. When studying counterpart antigens of species other than
that to which the antibodies were originally raised, different antibody
clones must be tested in combination with different microwave-assisted
AR (MAR) methods. This MAR method makes it possible to conduct
retrospective studies on archival guinea pig brain paraffin blocks to
evaluate changes in neuronal MAP-2 expression as a consequence of
chemical warfare nerve agent toxicity.