Signal Enhancement

TSA

HRP-catalyzed signal enhancement that deposits 10–100× more chromophore at target sites–enabling FRET detection in clinical tissue samples where protein expression may be limited.

View
Definition
Tyramide Signal Amplification uses horseradish peroxidase (HRP) to catalyze covalent deposition of tyramide-conjugated chromophoresLoading... at antibody binding sites. This enzymatic amplification deposits 10–100× more chromophore than direct labeling, providing signal-to-noise ratios sufficient for FRETLoading... detection in FFPE tissueLoading... samples with variable antigen preservation.
Amplified FRET: Solving the Tissue Problem
Primary
10–100× Amplification
Enhanced signal-to-noise ratio
HRP-Catalyzed
Horseradish peroxidase enzyme
Covalent Deposition
Stable chromophore anchoring
FFPE Compatible
Works with archived clinical tissue

The Amplification Mechanism

TSA exploits the catalytic activity of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) to amplify signal at target sites. HRP is conjugated to secondary antibodies that bind primary antibodies at protein targets.

When hydrogen peroxide is added with tyramide-chromophoreLoading... conjugates, HRP catalyzes the oxidation of tyramide, creating reactive intermediates that covalently bind to nearby tyrosine residues. This deposits 10–100× more chromophore than direct labeling methods.

Simplified

How TSA Works: An enzyme (peroxidase) activates tyramide molecules, which deposit near the enzyme and become covalently attached to tissue. Each enzyme can activate many tyramide molecules, amplifying the signal.

Simple Analogy: Instead of one flag marking a location, TSA plants dozens—much easier to see, especially when the target is rare.

Why Amplification Enables FRET

FRETLoading... detection requires sufficient chromophore density at target sites. In FFPELoading... clinical samples, antigen preservation varies and protein expression may be limited–direct labeling often produces insufficient signal.

TSA solves this by concentrating chromophore at the binding site, regardless of how much target protein is present. The covalent deposition creates stable, high-density labeling essential for reliable FRET measurements in clinical tissue.

Simplified

The Challenge: In tissue samples, target proteins may be sparse. Without amplification, there might not be enough signal for reliable FRET detection.

The Solution: TSA increases signal while maintaining spatial specificity, enabling FRET measurement even with limited target abundance.

TSA in iFRET and aFRET Workflows

Both iFRET (immune-FRETLoading...) and aFRET (amplified FRETLoading...) rely on TSA to achieve detectable signal in tissue samples. The workflow involves sequential labeling: primary antibody ' HRP-secondary ' tyramide-donor chromophore, then repeating with the second target and acceptor chromophore.

This two-site approach with TSA amplification at each target creates the chromophore density needed for FRET detection at protein-protein interactionLoading... sites within the 1–10 nm range.

Simplified

Implementation: QF-Pro uses TSA for the acceptor chromophore. This boosts acceptor signal while the donor signal comes from a different labeling strategy.

Result: Sufficient signal for FRET detection in standard FFPE clinical samples.

Direct Labeling
One chromophore per antibody binding site. Signal limited by target abundance, often insufficient for FRET in clinical samples.
Enzymatic Amplification
HRP deposits 10–100× chromophore per site. Signal-to-noise becomes sufficient for FRET detection regardless of expression level.

TSA in Clinical FRET Applications

  • FFPELoading... compatibility: Enables FRETLoading... measurement in standard clinical tissue with variable antigen preservation
  • Low-expression targets: Detects protein interactions even when one or both proteins are present at low levels
  • Standardized workflow: TSA protocol parallels routine IHCLoading...–familiar to pathology laboratories
  • Validated performance: TSA-based iFRETLoading... demonstrated predictive value in melanomaLoading..., NSCLCLoading..., and RCC studies

Connected Terms

Share This Term
Term Connections