Apoptotic rate: A new indicator for the quantification of the incidence of apoptosis in cell cultures

Alfredo Prieto(Universidad de Alcalá), David Díaz(Universidad de Alcalá), Hugo Barcenilla(Universidad de Alcalá), Julio García‐Suárez(Universidad de Alcalá), Eduardo Reyes(Universidad de Alcalá), Jorge Monserrat(Universidad de Alcalá), Esther San Antonio(Universidad de Alcalá), David Melero(Universidad de Salamanca), Antonio de la Hera(Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas), Alberto Órfão(Universidad de Salamanca), Melchor Álvarez‐Mon(Universidad de Alcalá)
Cytometry
July 26, 2002
Cited by 39Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Late apoptotic cells divide into apoptotic bodies and are missed by current detection methods. This results in an artificially low apoptotic index (AI). METHODS: This study proposes a flow cytometry-based ratiometric method that uses an internal reference standard of microbeads combined with fluorescein-annexin V binding and 7-aminoactinomycin D to enumerate viable, necrotic, and early and late apoptotic cells within specific subsets of a heterogeneous culture. RESULTS: In the absence of cell growth, the number of apoptotic cells that undergo fragmentation into apoptotic bodies in culture can also be determined accurately by this method. This information can then be used to obtain the apoptotic rate (AR), a new indicator of apoptosis that calculates the proportion of cells that have undergone apoptosis with respect to the total number of seeded cells. The main limitation of the method is that the AR is only suitable for the study of apoptosis in noncycling cells. CONCLUSIONS: This study reveals the superiority of the proposed method over the widely used Nicoletti method and current annexin-V binding methods. The AI did not reflect the true incidence of lymphocyte apoptosis, neither in response to lectins or phorbol esters, nor to serum deprivation. AR was more sensitive than AI, detecting apoptosis at lower concentrations of cell death inducers in all the subsets studied.


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