ARTICLE |
Correspondence to: Seth Love, Dept. of Neuropathology, Frenchay Hospital, Bristol BS16 1LE, UK.
![]() |
Summary |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
The recognition of apoptotic cells by morphological appearance alone may be difficult. We have investigated the use of in situ hybridization (ISH) with digoxigenin-labeled poly(A) probes to detect apoptotic cells in tissue sections. This method was compared to conventional morphologic assessment and in situ end-labeling (ISEL) in a range of tissues in which apoptosis is known to occur. ISH with poly(A) probes detected apoptotic nuclei in all tissues in which there was evidence of apoptosis as judged by conventional histology. ISH and, to a lesser extent, ISEL preferentially labeled shrunken but still intact nuclei with margination of chromatin, presumably at an early stage of apoptosis. The poly(A) hybridization was abolished by pretreatment of tissue sections with DNAse. After denaturation of DNA, poly(A) hybridized to nuclei in all cells. No convincing hybridization signal was detected in alcohol-fixed or fresh-frozen sections. Both ISEL and ISH labeled some of the nuclei in ischemic tissues. ISH with poly(A) oligonucleotide probes offers a simple alternative to ISEL for detection of cells in early stages of apoptosis. These probes hybridize to thymidine-rich sequences of DNA in the highly repeated Alu sequences within the nuclear genome. These sequences are believed to become available for hybridization after formalin fixation and paraffin embedding as a result of the apoptosis-related increase in the susceptibility of nuclear DNA to denaturation. (J Histochem Cytochem 45:13-20, 1997)
Key Words: apoptosis, in situ hybridization, poly(A), Alu sequences
![]() |
Introduction |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Apoptosis is a form of programmed cell death, characterized morphologically by cell shrinkage, cytoplasmic blebbing, chromatin clumping, and formation of membrane-bound fragments of the nucleus, termed apoptotic bodies (
The early morphological changes of apoptosis may be difficult to identify reliably under the light microscope. Apoptotic cells can be confused with infiltrating lymphocytes and cells in telophase (
One feature of early apoptosis is an increase in the susceptibility of nuclear DNA to denaturation (
![]() |
Materials and Methods |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
We examined a wide range of tissues in which apoptosis is known to occur. These included tonsil, late secretory and menstrual endometrium, duodenum from a child with graft-vs-host disease, developing fetal hands, and brain tumors. Ischemic cerebral neocortex and hippocampus and infarcted cerebellum and myocardium were also examined. The material had been fixed in either 10% or 20% formalin and embedded in paraffin. ISH, ISEL, and conventional morphological assessment were used to identify apoptotic cells and the results were compared. RNAse and DNAse pretreatments were used to confirm the nature of the target sequences for ISH. The effects of the formalin fixation and paraffin embedding and of omission of salmon sperm DNA from the prehybridization solution were also investigated.
Tissue Fixation.
Tissue was fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin, 20% unbuffered formalin, or 70% ethanol for 1-5 days and then processed overnight, through alcohol and either xylene or chloroform, to paraffin.
Probes.
Synthetic oligonucleotides 30 bases in length were synthesized on a DNA synthesizer. Similarly constructed poly(T) probes, and probes to the mitochondrial (
In Situ Hybridization.
Paraffin sections 4 µm thick were collected on aminopropyltriethoxysilane-coated glass slides. The sections were dewaxed in xylene and graded alcohols, washed in 2 x SSC at 70°C for 10 min, treated with 2-10 µg/ml proteinase K for 60 min at 37°C, and refixed in 0.4% para-formaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer for 20 min at 4°C.
Frozen sections were also collected on aminopropyltriethoxysilane-coated glass slides. The sections were air-dried for 20-30 min within a cryostat at -20°C and then, in some cases, immersed in 20% unbuffered formalin for 30 min at room temperature.
The effects of DNAse and RNAse pretreatment were investigated by incubating sections in either DNAse I (Promega; Madison, WI) or RNAse A (Sigma; St Louis, MO) for 60 min at 37°C before hybridization. In other experiments, sections were denatured by heating to 95°C for 15 min on a hotplate.
Hybridization took place overnight at 37°C in 50 µl of buffer containing 0.1 ng/µl probe, 600 mM NaCl, 0.1 M phosphate buffer, 10% dextran sulfate and, except in certain experiments, 150 µg/ml sheared salmon sperm DNA. Posthybridization washes consisted of 2 x SSC at 37°C. Thirty percent formamide was added to the hybridization solution and posthybridization washes with the probes to the mitochondrial and Coxsackie virus genomes. Sections were incubated for 10 min in Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)/0.5 M NaCl/3% bovine serum albumin, then for 30 min with anti-digoxigenin antibody (diluted 1:600) conjugated to alkaline phosphatase. Bound antibody was visualized by reaction with nitroblue tetrazolium salt and 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate solution with 1 µM levamisole, in the dark for up to 22 hr.
In Situ End-labeling.
Paraffin sections 4 µm thick were collected on aminopropyltriethoxysilane-coated glass slides. The sections were dewaxed in xylene and graded alcohols, then rinsed in water and treated with 2-10 µg/ml proteinase K for 60 min at 37°C. Reaction buffer (50 µl) (Boehringer Mannheim) that included 5 U terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase and 10 µM digoxigenin-11'-dUTP was added to the sections and left for 60 min at 37°C. Sections were incubated for 10 min in Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)/0.5M NaCl/3% bovine serum albumin, then for 30 min with anti-digoxigenin antibody (diluted 1:600) conjugated to alkaline phosphatase. Bound antibody was visualized by reaction with nitroblue tetrazolium salt and 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate solution containing 1 µM levamisole, in the dark for up to 2 hr.
Assessment of Nuclear Size.
The diameters of (a) normal nuclei, (b) nuclei and nuclear bodies identified as apoptotic in hematoxylin- and eosin-stained sections, (c) nuclei and nuclear bodies labeled by ISEL, and (d) nuclei and nuclear bodies labeled by ISH were compared in sections of a primitive neuroectodermal tumor composed of a relatively uniform population of tumor cells. The diameters were measured under a x 40 objective with the aid of an eyepiece graticule. Each data set comprised 100 measurements. Comparisons were made using Student's t-test.
![]() |
Results |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Conventional morphological assessment allowed relatively easy identification of the later stages of apoptosis, in which the nuclear chromatin becomes condensed and marginated and small apoptotic bodies form. Apoptotic cells were numerous in the basal epithelium and stroma of the late secretory and menstrual endometrium and within germinal centers of the tonsil (Figure 1). In the sections of tonsil, many of the apoptotic nuclei and bodies had been phagocytosed and could be identified in the cytoplasm of germinal center macrophages ("tingible body" macrophages). Scattered cells with apoptotic morphology were present in certain brain tumors (Figure 4a), in the duodenal mucosa in graft-vs-host disease, and in the subepidermal stroma of developing interdigital clefts in fetal hands. The sections of hippocampus, cerebellum, and myocardium showed the typical histological changes of acute ischemia and infarction.
|
|
|
|
ISH and ISEL produced nuclear signal in all of the locations in which cells showed histological changes of apoptosis (Figure 2 Figure 3 Figure 4 Figure 5 Figure 6), but both techniques detected only a proportion of the cells showing these changes and some apoptotic bodies remained unlabeled (Figure 4 and Figure 6). Both techniques labeled intact, although rounded and shrunken, nuclei in those parts of the tissues that also contained fragmented nuclei and apoptotic bodies. The appearance of the labeled nuclei and the correspondence between the distribution of these and the smaller apoptotic bodies suggested that the former represented cells in relatively early stages of apoptosis. These cells were more consistently labeled by ISH than by ISEL. Conversely, ISEL appeared to detect more, although not all, of the smaller apoptotic bodies.
|
|
The diameter of nuclei labeled by ISEL or ISH was compared with that of normal and apoptotic nuclei as assessed in hematoxylin- and eosin-stained sections (Figure 7). The mean diameter of apoptotic nuclei was significantly smaller than that of normal nuclei (p<0.001). Both ISEL and ISH labeled nuclei of similar mean diameter to that of apoptotic nuclei in hematoxylin- and eosin-stained sections. Although there was extensive overlap between the size of nuclei labeled by the two molecular genetic methods, the mean diameter of those labeled by ISH was slightly larger than that of those labeled by ISEL, and this difference was statistically significant (p=0.002). Another difference between ISH and ISEL was evident in the sections of tonsil. ISEL yielded a diffuse signal in the cytoplasm of many germinal center macrophages, whereas ISH tended to produce a more discrete signal over the individual intracytoplasmic apoptotic nuclear bodies (Figure 2b and Figure 3b).
|
Both ISH and ISEL labeled some of the nuclei in ischemic and infarcted tissues. This was particularly evident in sections of acutely infarcted cerebellum and in cerebral cortex showing morphological changes of acute ischemia.
Pretreatment of sections with DNAse I prevented the labeling of apoptotic nuclei by ISH. In contrast, RNAse A pretreatment had no effect on the nuclear signal. The possibility was considered that binding of probe to sheared, denatured salmon sperm DNA might be reducing the nuclear signal, but elimination of salmon sperm DNA from the prehybridization and hybridization buffers had no noticeable effect. Signal was slightly reduced but not abolished when the prehybridization 70°C wash in 2 x SSC was omitted.
To investigate the effects of the formalin fixation and the paraffin embedding, we performed ISH on unfixed and formalin-fixed cryostat sections of fresh tonsil and on paraffin sections of alcohol-fixed tonsil. No convincing hybridization signal was detected in the fresh-frozen sections or in paraffin sections of alcohol-fixed tissue (Figure 8a). There was some labeling of apoptotic cells in the formalin-fixed frozen sections but this was weaker than in the paraffin-embedded material. Denaturation of DNA by heating paraffin sections of tonsil that had been fixed in alcohol or formalin to 95°C resulted in hybridization of poly(A) to all nuclei (Figure 8b).
|
Apoptotic cells were also identified by poly(T) hybridization, although in some sections this was partly obscured by strong cytoplasmic hybridization to the polyadenylated mRNA. Oligonucleotide probes to the mitochondrial and Coxsackie virus genomes did not produce any signal in apoptotic nuclei (
![]() |
Discussion |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
We have demonstrated that ISH with digoxigenin-labeled poly(A) oligonucleotide probes allows the detection of apoptotic cells in a wide range of tissues. The results are similar to those obtained with ISEL and, as with ISEL, not all cells showing morphological features of advanced apoptosis are labeled. Both methods preferentially label cells with intact, albeit shrunken, nuclei. In view of the shape and size of these labeled nuclei and the fact that they occur in the immediate vicinity of other cells containing apoptotic nuclear bodies, it appears likely that this labeling is of cells in a relatively early stage of apoptosis. ISH tends to label cells with slightly larger nuclei than does ISEL which, in turn, labels relatively more of the small apoptotic bodies. These findings are consistent with previous studies demonstrating that an increase in the susceptibility of nuclear DNA to denaturation occurs at an earlier stage of apoptosis than does DNA fragmentation (
The poly(A) oligonucleotide probes hybridize to thymidine-rich nucleotide sequences. In the present study, the target sequences were shown to be within nuclear DNA rather than RNA. The intensity of signal in each labeled nucleus indicates the presence of large numbers of target sequences. A-T-rich regions occur in the highly repeated sequences of long and short (Alu family) interspersed elements of the human genome (
Previously, the increased susceptibility of apoptotic DNA to denaturation has been used to allow detection of apoptotic cells by flow cytometry (3 hr. These factors presumably act in concert with the increase in the susceptibility of genomic DNA to denaturation, caused by the apoptosis itself.
ISH requires far less terminal transferase and digoxigenin-dUTP than does ISEL, so the cost per section is considerably lower. However, ISH is probably no more specific than ISEL, which has been reported to detect necrotic as well as apoptotic cells (
![]() |
Acknowledgments |
---|
This work was funded by a grant from the Edwin Luff Bequest. We also thank Howard Pringle, whose observation prompted this study.
Received for publication May 20, 1996; accepted August 15, 1996.
![]() |
Literature Cited |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Arends MJ, Morris RG, Wyllie AH (1990) Apoptosis. The role of the endonuclease. Am J Pathol 136:593-608[Abstract]
Bruno S, Del Bino D, Lassota P, Giaretti W, Darzynkiewicz Z (1992) Inhibitors of proteases prevent endonucleolysis accompanying apoptotic cell death. Leukaemia 11:1113-1120
Darzynkiewicz Z, Bruno S, Del Bino G, Gorczyca W, Hotz MA, Lassota P, Traganos F (1992) Features of apoptotic cells measured by flow cytometry. Cytometry 13:795-808[Medline]
Ferrer I, Tortosa A, Macaya A, Sierra A, Moreno D, Munell F, Blanco Squier W (1994) Evidence of nuclear DNA fragmentation following hypoxia-ischemia in the infant rat brain and transient forebrain ischemia in the adult gerbil. Brain Pathol 4:115-122[Medline]
Forloni G, Chiesa R, Smiroldo S, Verga L, Salmona M, Tagliavani F, Angeretti N (1993) Apoptosis mediated neurotoxicity induced by chronic application of ß amyloid fragment 25-35. Neuroreport 4:523-526[Medline]
Fukuda K, Kojiro M, Chiu JF (1993) Demonstration of extensive chromatin cleavage in transplanted Morris hepatoma 7777 tissue: apoptosis or necrosis? Am J Pathol 142:935-946[Abstract]
Gavrieli Y, Sherman Y, Ben-Sasson SA (1992) Identification of programmed cell death in situ via specific labeling of nuclear DNA fragmentation. J Cell Biol 119:493-501[Abstract]
Gougeon ML, Montagnier L (1993) Apoptosis in AIDS. Science 260:1269-1270[Medline]
Graeber TG, Osmanian C, Jacks T, Houseman DE, Koch CJ, Lowe SW, Giaccia AJ (1996) Hypoxia-mediated selection of cells with diminished apoptotic potential in solid tumours. Nature 379:88-91[Medline]
Hickman JA (1992) Apoptosis induced by anticancer drugs. Cancer Metastasis Rev 11:121-139[Medline]
Hilton DA, Day C, Pringle JH, Fletcher A, Chambers S (1992) Demonstration of the distribution of Coxsackie virus RNA in neonatal mice by non-isotopic in situ hybridisation. J Virol Methods 40:155-162[Medline]
Hilton DA, Love S, Goodwin T, Pringle JH (1994) Demonstration of mitochondrial ribosomal RNA in frozen and paraffin-embedded sections of skeletal muscle by in situ hybridisation. Neuropathol Appl Neurobiol 20:573-576[Medline]
Hotz MA, Gong J, Traganos F, Darynkiewicz Z (1994) Flow cytometric detection of apoptosis: comparison of assays in situ DNA degradation and chromatin changes. Cytometry 15:237-244[Medline]
Lodish H, Baltimore D, Berk A, Zipursky SL, Matsudaira P, Darnell J (1995) The molecular anatomy of genes and chromosomes. In Molecular Cell Biology. New York, WH Freeman, 334-338
Migheli A, Cavalla P, Marino S, Schiffer D (1994) A study of apoptosis in normal and pathological nervous tissue after in situ end-labeling of DNA strand breaks. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol 53:606-616[Medline]
Nuovo GJ, Silverstein SJ (1988) Comparison of formalin, buffered formalin and Bouin's fixation on the detection of human papillomavirus deoxyribonucleic acid from genital lesions. Lab Invest 59:720-724[Medline]
Stewart BW (1994) Mechanisms of apoptosis: Integration of genetic, biochemical and cellular interactions. J Natl Cancer Inst 86:1286-1296[Abstract]
Waters RL (1992) Radiation-induced apoptosis in a murine T-cell hybridoma. Cancer Res 52:883-890[Abstract]
Wijsman JH, Jonker RR, Keijzer R, Van de Velde CJH, Cornelisse CJ, Van Dierendonck JH (1993) A new method to detect apoptosis in paraffin sections: in situ end-labeling of fragmented DNA. J Histochem Cytochem 41:7-12
Wyllie AH (1993) Apoptosis. Br J Cancer 67:205-208[Medline]
Wyllie AH (1980) Glucocorticoid-induced thymocyte apoptosis is associated with endogenous endonuclease activation. Nature 284:555-556[Medline]
Wyllie AH, Morris RG, Smith AL, Dunlop D (1984) Chromatin cleavage in apoptosis: association with condensed chromatin morphology and dependence on macromolecular synthesis. J Pathol 142:67-77[Medline]
Yoshiyama Y, Yamada T, Asanuma K, Asahi T (1994) Apoptosis related antigen, Ley and nick-end labeling are positive in spinal motor neurons in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Acta Neuropathol (Berl) 88:207-211[Medline]