An in vitro study of Hoechst 33342 redistribution and its effects on cell viability.

Hum Exp Toxicol

LNPR, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Pathophysiology, Zaloska, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Published: November 2005

Although Hoechst 33342 (H342) is frequently used to label donor cells in cell transplantation research, it has been noted that it might secondarily label the host cells. Furthermore, its potential toxicity leading to cell death has been described. We studied the time course of H342 redistribution from the primary labeled rat bone marrow stromal cells (rBMSC) into the non-labeled rBMSC population over 7 days in culture; we evaluated the nuclear H342 fluorescence intensity as a possible criterion for distinguishing the primary from the secondary labeled cells, and determined the viability of rBMSC after an overnight incubation in 1 microg/mL of H342. H342 labeled >50% of the initially non-labeled cells within the first 6 hours and almost 90% within a week. Nuclear fluorescence intensity was a reliable criterion for distinguishing primary and secondary labeled cells within the first 24 hours, but less so at later time points. The percentage of either apoptotic or necrotic cells did not rise acutely after the overnight incubation in 1 microg/mL of H342. Although a 12-hour incubation of rBMSC in 1 microg/mL of H342 did not cause acute cell death, H342 rapidly and extensively redistributed into non-labeled cells, which makes H342 a relatively unsuitable marker for cell transplantation research.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1191/0960327105ht570oaDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

microg/ml h342
12
h342
9
hoechst 33342
8
cells
8
cell transplantation
8
cell death
8
fluorescence intensity
8
criterion distinguishing
8
distinguishing primary
8
primary secondary
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!