4.5 Article

Classification of phytoplankton cells as live or dead using the vital stains fluorescein diacetate and 5-chloromethylfluorescein diacetate

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 4, Pages 572-589

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jpy.12415

Keywords

confidence intervals; false negative; false positive; flow cytometry; mortality; most probable number; viability; vital stain; vitality

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [445451-12]
  2. Trojan Technologies
  3. Strategic Cooperative Education Incentive Program of Nova Scotia

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Regulations for ballast water treatment specify limits on the concentrations of living cells indischarge water. The vital stains fluorescein diacetate (FDA) and 5-chloromethylfluorescein diacetate (CMFDA) in combination have been recommended for use in verification of ballast water treatment technology. We tested the effectiveness of FDA and CMFDA, singly and in combination, in discriminating between living and heat-killed populations of 24 species of phytoplankton from seven divisions, verifying with quantitative growth assays that uniformly live and dead populations were compared. The diagnostic signal, per-cell fluorescence intensity, was measured by flow cytometry and alternate discriminatory thresholds were defined statistically from the frequency distributions of the dead or living cells. Species were clustered by staining patterns: for four species, the staining of live versus dead cells was distinct, and live-dead classification was essentially error free. But overlap between the frequency distributions of living and heat-killed cells in the other taxa led to unavoidable errors, well in excess of 20% in many. In 4 very weakly staining taxa, the mean fluorescence intensity in the heat-killed cells was higher than that of the living cells, which is inconsistent with the assumptions of the method. Applying the criteria of 5% false negative plus 5% false positive errors, and no significant loss of cells due to staining, FDA and FDA+CMFDA gave acceptably accurate results for only 8-10 of 24 species (i.e., 33%-42%). CMFDA was the least effective stain and its addition to FDA did not improve the performance of FDA alone.

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