| Literature DB >> 22892216 |
Kyle S Hubbard1, Ian M Gut, Stephen M Scheeler, Megan E Lyman, Patrick M McNutt.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Simultaneous use of cell-permeant and impermeant fluorescent nuclear dyes is a common method to study cell viability and cell death progression. Although these assays are usually conducted as end-point studies, time-lapse imaging offers a powerful technique to distinguish temporal changes in cell viability at single-cell resolution. SYTO 13 and Hoechst 33342 are two commonly used cell-permeant nuclear dyes; however their suitability for live imaging has not been well characterized. We compare end-point assays with time-lapse imaging studies over a 6 h period to evaluate the compatibility of these two dyes with longitudinal imaging, using both control neurons and an apoptotic neuron model.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22892216 PMCID: PMC3599614 DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-5-437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Figure 1Neurons visualized with SYTO 13 or Hoechst exhibit different outcomes during time-lapse microscopy. (A) Neurons visualized with Hoescht (blue) remained viable over 6 h. Neurons stained with SYTO 13 (green) became PI-positive by 6 h, indicative of necrotic cell death. White arrows indicate cells that became PI-positive in each frame. (B) Repeated measures quantitation of nuclear area demonstrated no changes regardless of PI uptake.
Figure 2End-point assays of control and staurosporine-treated neurons exhibit identical outcomes at 6 h. (A) End-point characterization of nuclear morphology 6 h after addition of vehicle (top panels) or staurosporine (bottom panels). Neurons were visualized using PI plus either Hoescht (blue) or SYTO 13 (green). Note that neither vehicle nor staurosporine addition caused necrotic cell death. (B) Planimetric measurements of nuclear size. * represent p < 0.01.
Figure 3Staurosporine-treated neurons undergo different outcomes when SYTO 13 and Hoechst are used in time-lapse imaging. (A) Neurons stained with Hoescht (blue; top panels) visually undergo chromatin condensation within 4 h and remained PI-negative. In contrast, neurons visualized with 500 or 5 nM SYTO 13 (green) became PI-positive (red) by 2 h, without visual evidence of chromatin condensation. White arrows indicate cells that became PI-positive in each frame. Condensed, PI-positive nuclei (purple in top panels, red in middle and bottom panels) observed at time 0 represent cells that died during initial plating. In bottom panels, the increased gain needed to clearly image nuclear structure resulted in PI-positive nuclei developing an orange hue. (B) Planimetric quantitation of nuclear size measured longitudinally through the 6 h experiment. * represent p < 0.05; ^ represents p < 0.01.