| Literature DB >> 8187582 |
G J Boonen1, B M de Koster, M van der Keur, J VanSteveninck, H J Tanke, J G Elferink.
Abstract
When rabbit neutrophils were subjected to two electrical discharges of 4.75 kV/cm, the cells became permeable to propidium iodide. Measurement of propidium iodide fluorescence using flow cytometry showed that all cells in the suspension were permeabilized. The cells remained permeable for > 20 min when the cells were stored at 0 degree C. When exocytosis was induced by Ca2+ alone, the orthogonal light scatter (a sensitive parameter for cell granularity) of the complete population changed depending on the concentration. All the cells were equally sensitive to Ca2+ and showed a similar degree of exocytosis at the same time. In the presence of a fixed concentration of Ca2+ and a variable concentration of guanosine-5'-[v-thio]triphosphate (GTP gamma S), a division of the cell population was observed in the orthogonal light scatter histogram. At low GTP gamma S concentrations, a part of the population showed complete exocytosis and a part of the population showed almost no exocytosis. With increasing GTP gamma S concentrations, the light scatter pattern of the population changed indicating that the cells were gradually sensitive to GTP gamma S. Electropermeabilized neutrophils showed an equal sensitivity to Ca2+ and a graded sensitivity to GTP gamma S. Flow cytometry is considered as an ideal tool to study such an effect on a cell-to-cell basis.Entities:
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Year: 1994 PMID: 8187582 DOI: 10.1002/cyto.990150308
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytometry ISSN: 0196-4763