FLUOROCHROME LABELLING OF DNA STRAND BREAKS BY
TERMINAL DEOXYNUCLEOTIDYL TRANSFERASE (TdT-Assay) AND ANALYSIS BY FLOW
CYTOMETRY
Ildo Nicoletti & Roberta Mannucci
Istituto di Medicina Interna e Scienze Oncologiche
Università di Perugia, 06122 Perugia, Italy
EMail: imiso@unipg.it
Introduction
The apoptotic process is characterized by activation of nucleases which
produce a large number of DNA strand breaks. These breaks can be labelled
by attaching to them biotin- or digoxygenin conjugated dUTP in a reaction
catalysed by exogenous terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT-assay)
or DNA polymerase.
Fluorochrome-conjugated avidin or digoxygenin antibodies are used as
second step to label the DNA breaks and more recently, fluorochrome-conjugated
deoxy-nucleotides have been made available for a single-step labelling
procedure. Detection of breaks requires a pre-fixation with a cross-linking
agent, such as paraformaldheyde that unlike ethanol prevents the extraction
of fragmented DNA. Cells are then post-fixed in cold ethanol, labelled
with nucleotides in a TdT catalysed reaction, resuspended in PBS and counterstained
with PI for a simultaneous analysis of cell-cycle and apoptosis.
Materials
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Paraformaldehyde 1% in PBS pH 7.4
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Ethanol
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Potassium Cacodylate
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PBS
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TRIS-HCl
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Triton X-100
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BSA
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Cobalt Chloride
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Terminal Transferase (TdT from Sigma or Boheringer)
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FITC-dUTP (or BODIPY-dUTP or CY2-dUTP from Boheringer or Molecular Probes
or Amersham)
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RNAse A
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Propidium Iodide (PI) stock solution 50 mg/ml in PBS
Equipment
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Centrifuge
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Incubator
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Flow Cytometer
(A1) TdT Staining Solution
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10 ml of the reaction buffer (1 M Potassium
Cacodylate pH 7, 125 mM TRIS-Hcl pH 6.6, 1.25 mg/ml BSA)
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5 ml of Cobalt Chloride solution (CoCl2
25 mM)
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12.5 units of TdT in its storage buffer (usually 0.5 ml)
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0.25 nanomoles of FITC-dUTP (or BODIPY-dUTP) in its storage buffer
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Add distilled water to 50 ml
(A2) Rinsing Buffer
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PBS containing 0.1% Triton X-100 and 5 mg/ml BSA
(A3) PI Staining Solution
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Propidium Iodide 5 mg/ml, RNase A 200 mg/ml
in PBS
Methodology:
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Wash cells (1x106) in PBS and centrifuge at 200 g for 5 min
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Fix cells in 1 ml 1% paraformaldehyde pH 7.4 for 15 min on ice
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Centrifuge at 200 g for 5 min and resuspend the cell pellet in 5 ml PBS
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Centrifuge and resuspend cells in 0.5 ml PBS
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Post-fix the cell suspension in 5 ml ice-cold 70% (vol/vol) ethanol. Leave
cells in ethanol for at least one hour (the cells can be stored in ethanol
at -20°C for several days)
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Centrifuge, remove ethanol, resuspend cells in 5 ml PBS and centrifuge
-
Resuspend the cell pellet in 50 ml of TdT staining
solution (A1)
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Incubate cells for 60 min at 37°C
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Add 1.5 ml of rinsing buffer resuspend throughly and centrifuge
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Repeat rinsing in 1.5 ml of rinsing buffer (A2) and centrifuge
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Resuspend cell pellet in 1 ml of PI staining solution (A3)
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Incubate for at least 30 min at room temperature in the dark and analyse
cells by flow cytometry
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For flow cytometer analysis: construct a dot plot of PI red fluorescence
on x-axis vs. green fluorescence of incorporated nucleotides on y-axis
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Set red (PI) fluorescence acquisition in linear mode
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Set green (FITC) fluorescence acquisition in logarithmic scale
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Set photomultiplier parameters (gain and compensation) appropriately (a
classic example is provided in figure 1)
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Run the samples. Collect at least 104 cells/sample


Figure 1. TdT assay in in vitro cultured MCF-7 breast cancer
cells and examined by flow cytometry. Nuclei are counterstained with PI
to analyse the relationships between cell-cycle position and apoptosis.
Contour plot of log-growing cells (left panel) does not show any green
fluorescence. Treatment with genistein (100 mM 12h and subsequent 12 h
release, middle panel) is followed by the appearance of green-stained (apoptotic)
cells. The apoptosis is maximal in the G0-G1 phase of the cell cycle. Continuous
(24 h) exposure to the same agent (right panel) produce apoptosis in both
G0-G1 and G2/M cell-cycle phases.
Alternative methods:
Alternative methods utilize either digoxigenin-conjugated d-UTP followed
by staining with a FITC-conjugated anti-digoxigenin Ab or biotin-conjugated
d-UTP followed by staining with FITC-conjugated streptavidin. These methods
produce a stronger emission in the green (FITC) channels but they increase
the aspecific staining, with a reduced signal/background ratio.
Commentary
Background informations
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This is the most specific method for evaluation of early phases of apoptosis
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Commercial kits (Boheringer and Amersham) for this assay are available
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Since the DNA content of cells is simultaneously measured, the method provides
the unique possibility of analysing the cell-cycle position of apoptotic
cells
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An important disadvantage stems from the high cost (particularly when commercially
available kits are used)
Critical parameters
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A proper fixation to avoid loss of fragmented DNA (the major source of
staining!!) is essential
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Maintain the TdT stock solution at –20°C since its activity is critical
for nucleotide incorporation into DNA strand breaks
Troubleshooting
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Necrotic cells and/or cells repairing DNA can present some staining particularly
when indirect methods (see alternative methods) are utilized
Key References
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Gavrieli Y, Y Sherman and SA Ben-Sasson. 1992. Identification of programmed
cell death in situ via specific labeling of nuclear DNA fragmentation.
J Cell Biol 119:493-501
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Gorczyca W, J Gong and Z Darzynkiewicz. 1993. Detection of DNA strand breaks
in individual apoptotic cells by the in situ terminal deoxynucleotidyl
transferase and nick translation assays. Cancer Res 53:1945-1951
-
Darzynkiewicz Z, X Li and J Gong. 1994. Assay of cell viability: Discrimination
of cells dying by apoptosis. In: Flow cytometry (2nd Edition).
Z Darzynkiewicz, JP Robinson and HA Crissman eds. Academic Press, New York,
pp 15-38.