4.4 Article

Modified Annexin V/Propidium Iodide Apoptosis Assay For Accurate Assessment of Cell Death

Journal

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
Volume -, Issue 50, Pages -

Publisher

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/2597

Keywords

Cellular Biology; Issue 50; Apoptosis; cell death; propidium iodide; Annexin V; necrosis; immunology

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC) research grant
  2. Alberta Agriculture Funding Consortium grant
  3. NSERC Vanier Canadian Graduate Scholarship,
  4. Queen Elizabeth II graduate scholarship

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Studies of cellular apoptosis have been significantly impacted since the introduction of flow cytometry-based methods. Propidium iodide (PI) is widely used in conjunction with Annexin V to determine if cells are viable, apoptotic, or necrotic through differences in plasma membrane integrity and permeability(1,2). The Annexin V/PI protocol is a commonly used approach for studying apoptotic cells(3). PI is used more often than other nuclear stains because it is economical, stable and a good indicator of cell viability, based on its capacity to exclude dye in living cells(4,5). The ability of PI to enter a cell is dependent upon the permeability of the membrane; PI does not stain live or early apoptotic cells due to the presence of an intact plasma membrane(1,2,6). In late apoptotic and necrotic cells, the integrity of the plasma and nuclear membranes decreases(7,8), allowing PI to pass through the membranes, intercalate into nucleic acids, and display red fluorescence(1,2,9). Unfortunately, we find that conventional Annexin V/PI protocols lead to a significant number of false positive events (up to 40%), which are associated with PI staining of RNA within the cytoplasmic compartment(10). Primary cells and cell lines in a broad range of animal models are affected, with large cells (nuclear: cytoplasmic ratios <0.5) showing the highest occurrence(10). Herein, we demonstrate a modified Annexin V/PI method that provides a significant improvement for assessment of cell death compared to conventional methods. This protocol takes advantage of changes in cellular permeability during cell fixing to promote entry of RNase A into cells following staining. Both the timing and concentration of RNase A have been optimized for removal of cytoplasmic RNA. The result is a significant improvement over conventional Annexin V/PI protocols (< 5% events with cytoplasmic PI staining).

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