| Literature DB >> 26150958 |
Rosana Rodríguez-Casuriaga1, Federico F Santiñaque2, Gustavo A Folle2, Elisa Souza1, Beatriz López-Carro2, Adriana Geisinger3.
Abstract
Availability of purified or highly enriched fractions representing the various spermatogenic stages is a usual requirement to study mammalian spermatogenesis at the molecular level. Fast preparation of high quality testicular cell suspensions is crucial when flow cytometry (FCM) is chosen to accomplish the stage/s purification. Formerly, we reported a method to rapidly obtain good quality rodent testicular cell suspensions for FCM analysis and sorting. Using that method we could distinguish and purify early meiocytes (leptotene/zygotene stages, L/Z) from more advanced ones (pachytene, P) in guinea pig, which presents an unusually high content of early stages. Here we present an upgrade of that method with improvements that enabled the obtainment of high-purity meiotic substages also from mouse testis, namely:•Shortening of the mechanical disaggregation time to optimize the integrity of the suspension.•Elimination of the 25 μm-filtration step to ensure the presence of large P cells.•Inclusion of a non-cytotoxic, DNA-specific, 488 nm-excitable vital fluorochrome (Vybrant DyeCycle Green [VDG], Invitrogen) instead of Hoechst 33342 (requires UV laser, which can damage nucleic acids) or propidium iodide (usually related to dead/damaged cells). As far as we know, this is the first report on the use of this fluorochrome for the discrimination and purification of meiotic prophase I substages.Entities:
Keywords: Flow cytometry; Mouse; Spermatogenesis; Testis; Vybrant DyeCycle Green
Year: 2014 PMID: 26150958 PMCID: PMC4473029 DOI: 10.1016/j.mex.2014.10.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MethodsX ISSN: 2215-0161
Fig. 1(A) Flow cytometric analysis of a 21-day-old mouse testicular cell suspension stained with VDG. A dot plot depicting forward scatter (FSC-H) vs. VDG fluorescence intensity and its corresponding histogram are shown. Peaks corresponding to cell populations differing in their DNA content (C, 2C and 4C) are indicated. Sorting gates chosen within the C and 4C populations are shown as well (R1 and R2, respectively). (B) Analysis of sorted cells from the indicated gates (C upper region [R1], and 4C right upper region [R2]). Sorted cells were analyzed under laser confocal (VDG green fluorescence) and differential interference contrast (DIC) microscopy. Note the homogeneity and integrity of the classified material. Bars correspond to 20 μm.
Fig. 2(A) Flow cytometric profiles obtained from the analysis of a 25-day-old mouse testicular cell suspension. A FSC-H vs. VDG fluorescence intensity dot plot and its corresponding histogram are shown. Peaks pertaining to C, 2C and 4C cell populations are indicated. Sorting gates within the 4C population are indicated (R3 and R4). (B) Analysis of sorted cells from R3 and R4 regions. Laser confocal microscopy of immunodetections using an antibody (Acris) raised against the Ct region of mouse Sycp3 (synaptonemal complex [SC] protein 3, a lateral element component) is shown. Immunodetections were performed basically as described in [11], except that a Texas Red-tagged goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody (Abcam) was employed. As can be seen, cells coming from R3 region correspond to early stages of the first meiotic prophase (L and Z) in which simple axes (L) and short stretches of SCs (Z) are present, while those classified from R4 region are mid-to-late primary spermatocytes (P stage) with completely assembled SCs. Bars correspond to 10 μm.