4.5 Article

The γH2AX Assay for Genotoxic and Nongenotoxic Agents: Comparison of H2AX Phosphorylation with Cell Death Response

Journal

TOXICOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 140, Issue 1, Pages 103-117

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/toxsci/kfu066

Keywords

genotoxicants; testing; gamma H2AX assay; flow cytometry; MTT assay; DNA damage

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Funding

  1. FACS unit by the NMFZ Mainz [32]
  2. German Research Society [NI 1319/1-2]

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DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) and blocked replication forks resulting from bulky adducts and inhibitors of replication activate the DNA damage response (DDR), a signaling pathway marked by phosphorylation of histone 2AX (H2AX). The phosphorylated form, gamma H2AX, accumulates at the site of the damage and can be visualized as foci by immunocytochemistry. The objective of this study was to assess if gamma H2AX is a reliable biomarker for genotoxic exposures. To this end, we selected 14 well-known genotoxic compounds and compared them with 10 nongenotoxic chemicals, using CHO-9 cells because they are well characterized as to DNA repair and DDR. We quantified gamma H2AX foci manually and automatically. In addition, total gamma H2AX activation was determined by flow cytometry. For all chemicals the cytotoxic dose response was assayed by a metabolic cytotoxicity assay. We show that (1) all genotoxic agents induced gamma H2AX dose-dependently whereas nongenotoxic agents do not; (2) gamma H2AX was observed for genotoxicants in the cytotoxic dose range, revealing a correlation between cytotoxicity and gamma H2AX for genotoxic agents; for nongenotoxic agents cytotoxicity was not related to gamma H2AX; (3) manual scoring of gamma H2AX and automated scoring provided comparable results, the automated scoring was faster and investigator independent; (4) data obtained by foci counting and flow cytometry showed a high correlation, suggesting that gamma H2AX scoring by flow cytometry has the potential for high-throughput analysis. However, the microscopic evaluation can provide additional information as to foci size, distribution, colocalization and background staining; (5) gamma H2AX foci were colocalized with 53BP1 and Rad51, supporting the notion that they represent true DSBs. Collectively, the automated analysis of gamma H2AX foci allows for rapid determination of genetic damage in mammalian cells. The data revealed that the induction of gamma H2AX by genotoxicants is related to loss of viability and support gamma H2AX as a reliable bio-indicator for pretoxic DNA damage.

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