This material was originally published in the Purdue Cytometry CD-ROM Series,volume 4

FLUORESCENCE MICROSCOPY ANALYSIS OF NUCLEAR ALTERATIONS DURING APOPTOSIS

 

Ildo Nicoletti & Roberta Mannucci
Istituto di Medicina Interna e Scienze Oncologiche
Università di Perugia, 06122 Perugia, Italy
EMail: imiso@unipg.it


Introduction
 

.
 
Protocol for Fluorescence Microscopy: Fixation
 
1. Adherent cell lines

Materials

(A1) Preparation of paraformaldehyde (PFA) solution (100 ml): Methodology
  1. Wash cells in PBS pH 7.2
  2. Fix cells in 3.7% paraformaldehyde (PFA) in PBS pH 7.2 for 15 min. at room temperature
  3. Wash once with PBS for 5 min at room temperature
  4. Cover the cells with methanol 5 min. room temperature
  5. Wash cells in PBS pH 7.2
  6. Incubate with staining solution
 
Alternative fixation methods:  * These alternative methods should be used when the permeabilization of cells (i.e. for a combined immunofluorescence staining) is a critical point of the procedure

 
2. Cells growing in suspension

Materials

Equipment  Methodology
  1. Wash cells in PBS pH 7.2
  2. Spin the cells down (2x105 cells 5 min. at 500g)
  3. Air dry
  4. Restart from point 2 of previous paragraph
 
Protocol for Fluorescence Microscopy: Staining
 

 Nuclei can be stained with different fluorochromes, depending on experimental requirements. For example, if a simultaneous analysis of membrane antigens with FITC and/or TRITC is performed, nuclei should be stained with a UV-excited, blue-emitting fluorochrome such as DAPI (excitation 358 nm, emission 461 nm). Propidium iodide (excitation 536 nm, emission 617 nm) can be used for routinary analysis of nuclear morphology or in combination with green-emitting fluorochromes (i.e. FITC).

 
DAPI Staining
 
Materials

Equipment  
(A1) Preparation of DAPI stock solution:           Suspension cells     1) Pretratment solution

                                                 Citric acid 4.2 g (0.2M)
                                                 Tween 20 0.5 ml
                                                 Distilled H2O 100 ml

                            2) Staining solution
                                                  Distilled H2O 100 ml
                                                  Na2HPO4 7.2 g
                                                  DAPI 0.2 mg (200 m l from stock solution)
 

Methodology:

 
 
Citric acid 2.1 g
Tween 20 0.5 ml
Distilled H2O 100 ml
         2) Staining solution
          Citric acid 11.8 g
          DAPI 0.2 mg (200 m l from stock solution)
          Distilled H2O 100 ml
Methodology:   * Staining solutions can be stored at room temperature for several weeks protected from light

 
Support Protocol ( Short Protocol)

Materials

 
Methodology:  

Propidium Iodide Staining

 
Materials

Equipment  
(A1) Preparation of Propidium Iodide stock solution:  
Methodology:

 Suspension Cells

 
Adherent Cells  
 

Protocol for Confocal Fluorescence Microscopy: Fixation

Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) has recently emerged as a technique which offers several advantages over conventional fluorescence microscopy. The out-of-focus blur is virtually absent from confocal images, giving the capability for serial optical sectioning of intact specimens and subsequent three-dimensional reconstruction. For a precise analysis of stereo-spatial relationships of different cellular organelles, it is critical that fixation and mounting of specimens preserve the structural architecture of the cells. The ideal fixative should penetrate tissues quickly, act rapidly and preserve the cellular structure before the cell can react to produce structural artifacts. The fixation methods described below have been optimized for CLSM analysis of apoptotic cells and nuclei.
 

1. Cells growing in suspension

Materials

Equipment  
(A1) Preparation of PFA in CSK solution (100 ml): * Prepare 10X CSK solution w/o sucrose (can be stored at room temperature for several weeks).

* The PFA solution with sucrose should be made freshly
 

(A2) Preparation of poly-L-lysine coated coverslips:

* The polyl-L-lysine coated coverslips can be stored at room temperature for several days
* Store the poly-L-lysine stock solution at -20°C
 

Methodology

 

 2. Adherent cell lines

Materials

Equipment   Methodology:  

Protocol for Confocal Fluorescence Microscopy: Staining

As reported in the previous chapter, in this case too nuclei can be stained with different fluorochromes, depending on experimental demands. Since the majority of CLSMs are equipped with argon (488 nm excitation line) or argon-kripton (488, 568 and 647 nm excitation lines) only fluorochromes with appropriate excitation spectra can be used. Propidium iodide or long-wavelenght nuclear fluorochromes (TO-PRO-3, TOTO-3 from Molecular Probes) are both suitable for revealing nuclear alterations during apoptosis. The staining method is the same reported in the previous paragraph. After staining samples should be properly mounted for CLSM processing:

 
(A1) Mounting Medium: there are a number of commercially available preparations (FluoroGuard from BioRad, SlowFade and ProLong from Molecular Probes) which contain anti-fade agents to reduce fluorescence photo-bleaching. A good semi-permanent mountant can be obtained as follows:  

Protocol for Acridine Orange Staining after DNA denaturation  

Acridine Orange (AO) is a metachromatic dye which differentially stains double-stranded (ds) and single-stranded (ss) nucleic acids. When AO intercalates into dsDNA it emits green fluorescence upon excitation at 480-490 nm. On the contrary, it emits red when interacts with ssDNA or RNA. Chromatin condensation is an early event of apoptosis and the condensed chromatin is much more sensitive to DNA denaturation than normal chromatin. Therefore, if RNA is removed by pre-incubation with RNase A and DNA is denaturated in situ by exposure to HCl shortly before AO staining, apoptotic cells (which have a larger fraction of DNA in the denaturated form) display an intense red fluorescence and a reduced green emission when compared to non-apoptotic interphase cells.
 

Materials  

Equipment  
  (A1) Staining solution   * Acridine Orange solution is stable for several weeks when stored at 4°C and in the dark

 
(A2) RNAse solution

 

  Methodology:

  1. Wash cells (1x106) in PBS and centrifuge at 200 g for 5 min
  2. Resuspend the cell pellet in 1 ml PBS
  3. Fix cells by transferring the cell suspension in 9 ml 1% paraformaldehyde in PBS, on ice. Incubate for 15 min on ice
  4. Centrifuge at 200 g for 5 min and resuspend the cell pellet in 5 ml PBS, centrifuge
  5. Suspend the cell pellet in 1 ml PBS and transfer the suspension in 9 ml 70% (vol/vol) ethanol, on ice.
  6. Incubate for 4 h (The cells can be stored in ethanol for weeks)
  7. Centrifuge at 200 g for 5 min and resuspend the cell pellet in 1 ml PBS
  8. Add 0.2 ml of RNAse A solution. Incubate at 37°C for 30 min
  9. Centrifuge at 200 g for 5 min and resuspend the cell pellet in 0.2 ml PBS
  10. Add 0.5 ml of 0.1 M HCl at room temperature
  11. After 30-45 sec add 2 ml AO staining solution
  12. Observe the cells under fluorescence microscope with an appropriate filter set.
  13. Alternatively, analyse cells by flow cytometry (excitation 488 nm; dot plot of green fluorescence at 530± 20 nm versus red fluorescence >600 nm).
 

Key References

 

  1. Hotz MA, F Traganos and Z Darzynkiewicz. 1992.Changes in nuclear chromatin related to apoptosis or necrosis induced by the DNA topoisomerase II inhibitor fostriecin in MOLT-4 and HL-60 cells are revealed by altered DNA sensitivity to denaturation. Exp Cell Res 201:184-191
  1. Gorman A, J McCarthy, D Finucane, W Reville and T Cotter. 1994. Morphological assessement of apoptosis. In: Techniques in Apoptosis. A user’s guide. TG Cotter and SJ Martin eds, Portland Press, New York, pp. 1-20
  1. Pawley JB.1995. Handbook of Biological Confocal Microscopy (2nd Edition). Plenum Publishing Corporation, New York.