Detection of Fragmented DNA in Apoptotic Cells Embedded in LR White: A Combined Histochemical (LM) and Ultrastructural (EM) StudyGertrud Gopinga, Katherine A. Woodb, Yoshitatsu Seic, and Harvey B. Pollardaa Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland b Trevigen, Inc., Gaithersburg, Maryland c Department of Anesthesiology, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland Correspondence to: Harvey B. Pollard, Dept. of Anatomy, Uniformed Services U. of the Health Sciences, 4301 Jones Bridge Road, Bethesda, MD 20814-4799.
We developed an improved method for the detection of double-strand DNA breaks in apoptotic cells at both the light (LM) and electron microscopic (EM) levels using a modification of the TdT (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase)-mediated dUTP nick end-labeling (TUNEL) technique. Cultured rat cerebellar granule cells were exposed to low potassium conditions to induce apoptosis. Twenty-four hr after treatment, one group of cells was fixed in situ with 4% paraformaldehyde and labeled for DNA fragmentation characteristic of apoptosis. Apoptotic cells were visualized with diaminobenzidine (DAB) and viewed by LM. The second group of cells was detached from the culture dish, pelleted, fixed with a 4% paraformaldehyde and 0.2% glutaraldehyde mixture, and embedded in LR White. For LM, the modified TUNEL technique was performed on 1.5-µm LR White sections and apoptotic cells were visualized using an enzymatic reaction to generate a blue precipitate. For EM, thin sections (94 nm) were processed and DNA fragmentation was identified using modified TUNEL with streptavidin-conjugated gold in conjunction with in-depth ultrastructural detail. Alternate sections of cells embedded in LR White can therefore be used for LM and EM TUNEL-based detection of apoptosis. The present findings suggest that the modified TUNEL technique on LR White semithin and consecutive thin sections has useful application for studying the fundamental mechanism of cell death. (J Histochem Cytochem 47:561568, 1999) Key Words: CNS, apoptosis, in situ end labeling, LR White, microscopy
Apoptosis and necrosis are two different types of cell death which can be distinguished by histochemical and ultrastructural criteria (
A common hallmark of apoptosis is DNA fragmentation. Early in the apoptotic process there are double-stranded DNA breaks that generate large DNA fragments (50sp300 KBP). Ultimately, the cell accumulates several million double-stranded DNA breaks that typically occur within the linker DNA regions between nucleosomes. Extraction of total DNA from an apoptotic cell population and analysis by agarose gel electrophoresis reveals a ladder pattern of approximately 180 BP and multimers thereof. Detection of the double-stranded DNA breaks in apoptotic nuclei can be readily achieved at the LM level on paraffin sections and cryosections using enzymatic detection of the free 3' hydroxyl ends at the sites of the DNA breaks. A common method employed is to incorporate biotinylated nucleotides at the ends of the DNA using TdT, followed by binding to streptavidinperoxidase conjugate and peroxidase detection using color development with diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride (DAB). Apoptotic cells are identified by a dark brown stain that is confined to the nucleus. Other similar methods employ alternative nucleotides and color development reagents but are all based upon terminal UTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL) using TdT (
LR White and LR Gold have been used by us and others as an embedding medium for histological stains such as hematoxylin and eosin (H&E), periodic acidSchiff (PAS), trichrome stain, and the biochemical TUNEL stain (
On the basis of our previous experience with LR White as an embedding medium for immunolabeling at the EM level (
Preparation of Cell Cultures
Preparation of LR White Sections
Light Microscopy
Electron Microscopy
Cells cultured in poly-L-lysine-coated two-well chamber slides were fixed in 4% formaldehyde in PBS for 10 min at RT, then immersed in 100% methanol for 5 min. The slides were washed once in PBS, and then the cells were covered with NeuroPore and left overnight at 4C. DNA labeling was then performed using the TACS (Trevigen Apoptotic Cell System) 2 TdT/DAB kit for apoptosis detection in situ. Details are found in manufacturers' instructions (Trevigen; Gaithersburg, MD).
In Situ Apoptosis Detection Modified for Cells Embedded in LR White TdT Assay for Thin Sections on Grids. For EM, a streptavidingold conjugate was used for direct visualization. The labeling reaction was performed as described above, except that permeabilization with CytoPore and quenching with H2O2 were eliminated. All washes of grids were performed in porcelain dishes, transporting the grids with a platinum loop. Drops of labeling reaction mix were placed on sheets of dental wax (Electron Microsopy Sciences; Fort Washington, PA), and the grids were placed section side down on the drops. Sections were incubated in a tightly closed humidified chamber overnight in an incubator at 4C with 2.5 µg/ml streptavidingold conjugate (EY Laboratories; San Mateo, CA) in PBS, 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA). When grids were placed from the last wash onto the TdT labeling mixture or streptavidingold conjugate, care was taken to remove excess liquid by touching the grid edges with lens paper. Sections were washed four times in PBS with 1% BSA, four times in PBS, three times in double-distilled water and stained in an LKB stainer (Leica) standard for 20 min with uranyl acetate and for 0.4 min with lead citrate. Quantitation of apoptotic cells (Figure 3) in control, experimental apoptosis, and experimental necrosis cultures was carried out as follows. The total number of cells and apoptotic cells were counted in 4 L micrographs (+OsO4), four-color TUNEL micrographs (-OsO4), and 6 E micrographs (+OsO4) for control culture, necrosis culture, and apoptosis culture. The number of apoptotic cells was then expressed as a percentage of the total population. Every cell present in the micrograph was counted. The magnification of L micrographs was x 600 (304 cm2) of TUNEL micrographs x 590 (120 cm2), and the magnification of E micrographs was x 4750 (456 cm2).
Cerebellar granule neurons in culture treated with low-potassium medium to induce apoptosis were labeled in situ for apoptosis using the TACS 2 TdT/DAB kit. Approximately 40% of the cells showed dark brown nuclear staining indicative of DNA fragmentation associated with apoptosis. The granule cells lost the network of neurites, the cell bodies were condensed, and the cell processes were shrunken (not shown). Therefore, apoptotic cells can be detected in situ in this system before embedding in LR White. Apoptosis has also been confirmed by others, using detection of DNA fragmentation by agarose electrophoresis of extracted total DNA ( For LM studies on LR White-embedded unosmicated cells, blocks were serial sectioned at 1.5 µm and alternately stained with H&E (Figure 1AC) or labeled with TACS 2 TdT/Blue Label (Figure 1DH). Control cells (Figure 1A) showed healthy granule cells and labeling for DNA fragmentation (Figure 1D) was negative, as indicated by the lack of a dark blue precipitate. Cells had a structured nucleus and clearly outlined membranes. In cells treated with low potassium to induce apoptosis and stained with H&E (Figure 1B), apoptotic cells were evident by the dark blue-stained and shrunken nucleus and clumping of chromatin. Adjacent sections labeled with the TACS 2 TdT/Blue Label kit (Figure 1E) showed a significant number of cells with blue nuclear precipitate indicative of apoptosis. The chromatin in apoptotic cells was clumped and was integrated with the nuclear membrane. Sections stained with peroxidase-conjugated streptavidin in the absence of the TdT enzyme showed no background blue staining (not shown), confirming that positive staining in the experimental sections was enzyme-mediated. The inset (Figure 1F) shows a high-power view of the typical morphology associated with apoptotic labeling, including condensed nuclei in shrunken cells. Therefore, embedding in LR White maintains apoptotic morphology when viewed by LM after detection of DNA fragmentation using TUNEL-based assays.
Necrotic cells, generated by exposure to glutamate for 3 hr and stained with H&E (Figure 1C), showed that many cells were lysed, with a reduction in cell numbers (see open spaces). Labeling of an adjacent section with the TACS 2 TdT/Blue Label (Figure 1G) also showed cell loss. In necrotic cells, cytoplasmic alterations precede the nuclear changes, in contrast to apoptosis, in which primary events occur in the nucleus (
The morphology was evaluated more thoroughly at the EM level (Figure 2). Control cells (Figure 2B) showed typical cerebellar granule cells with a large nucleus, limited cytoplasm, and a complete set of subcellular organelles. Cells treated with low potassium for 24 hr (Figure 2A) exhibited condensed and clumpy chromatin, cell shrinkage, and ruffled nuclear and cell membranes ( We were interested in determining whether DNA fragmentation could be detected at the EM level from the same LR White blocks used to generate data for LM studies (Figure 1). For direct visualization of sites of DNA fragmentation, the TUNEL-based assay was performed using a streptavidingold conjugate. In control cells, no gold labeling was seen in either the cell nuclei or cytoplasm (data not shown), supporting the data presented above that the majority of cells in the control culture do not label with the TUNEL-based assay (not shown). In apoptotic cells (Figure 2D and Figure 2E), gold particles were associated with the nucleus. The nucleus of the apoptotic cell in Figure 2E is shrunken and gold labeling is mainly seen in the nucleus, with a few grains in the cytosol (see arrows). Background labeling was almost nonexistent. In contrast to apoptotic cells, the necrotic cell shown in Figure 2F was lysed and the cell membranes were broken. A few gold particles were associated with the condensed chromatin and on the inside of the nuclear membrane. The deposition of gold particles in control, apoptotic, and necrotic cells is therefore in agreement with the respective blue labeling for LM (Figure 1). However, there is a distinct difference in labeling. The more necrosis proceeds, the more gold labeling decreases, in contrast to progressive apoptosis, in which gold labeling increases with time. The results of the quantitative data for apoptosis are presented in Figure 3. In control samples, the number of apoptotic cells for both LM and EM was less than 5%, with numbers ranging from 2 to 4% of the total population counted. For necrosis samples, the percentage of apoptotic cells was also very low, ranging from 2 to 5%. EM exhibited the highest percentage of apoptotic cells, ranging from 25 to 31% of the total population. Although the data are not presented in the graph, necrotic cells were also counted in the experimental necrotic cultures. The percentage of necrotic cells in both the L and E micrographs ranged from 90 to 98% of the total cell count. As shown in the apoptotic data, the highest percentage was seen in electron micrographs.
In this study, a technique to detect fragmented DNA in sequential sections for LM and EM from the same LR White block is described. The method allows the detection of fragmented DNA in 1.5-µm LR White sections and, simultaneously, a biochemical detection for DNA fragmentation in 90-nm sections visualized with streptavidingold conjugate. For end-labeling on semithin and ultrathin sections, we found it necessary to omit secondary fixation with OsO4 and/or membrane enhancement of the cells with potassium ferricyanide. DNA end-labeling on osmicated cells (different pellet, same culture) was 50% less efficient than labeling on unosmicated cells (not shown). However, for the ultrastructural observations alone and quantitative data (Figure 3), we employed OsO4 postfixation. DNA end-labeling of cells requires careful preparation of the cell pellet. Solvent exposure was kept at a minimum by employing short fixation, dehydration, and embedding times. The temperature for polymerization was maintained at 40C (in a vacuum oven). Treatment of sections with proteinase K was omitted because it exposes nonapoptotic cells, resulting in false-positive labeling.
Previous investigators have reported DNA end-labeling in apoptotic nuclei in tissue or cells at the LM level, using cryosections or paraffin-embedded sections (
The detection of DNA fragmentation at the early stages of necrosis probably reflects the presence of free 3' hydroxyl groups in DNA from nonspecific damage and the action of lysomal enzymes ( Quantitative comparison of the number of apoptotic cells scored morphologically at the LM level using modified TUNEL, and morphologically at the EM level, gave similar results for control samples and necrotic samples, with the numbers of apoptotic cells being scored at below 5% regardless of the method of sample preparation. In apoptotic samples, the numbers of apoptotic cells determined using TUNEL was slightly less than that for morphological scoring at both the LM and EM levels. Because DNA fragmentation is known to be a relatively late event during apoptosis, it is likely that certain cells will exhibit sufficient morphological changes for the cell to be scored as apoptotic before DNA fragmentation. The highest percentage of apoptotic and necrotic cells was seen in the EM data. The most likely explanation for these data is the ease of identification of both the apoptotic and necrotic features at higher magnification. One minor disadvantage of using the LR White matrix is that sections of embedded materials have to be kept relatively small. Therefore, more blocks must be cut.
The exact order of events in apoptosis is not known (
It may be difficult to determine the type of cell death, as well as the degree and localization of DNA breaks, in such neurodegenerative diseases as Alzheimer's disease ( We suggest that the modified TUNEL-based assay used on LR White sections will prove to be an important tool in the study of mechanisms of apoptotic, necrotic, and other types of cell death in the CNS and other systems.
We thank Dr Juanita Anders for critical editorial assistance. Received for publication February 20, 1998; accepted November 10, 1998.
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