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Cytometry in cell necrobiology: Analysis of apoptosis and accidental cell death (necrosis)

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TLDR
Flow cytometry appears to be the methodology of choice to study various aspects of necrobiology and it is expected that flow cytometry will be the dominant methodology for necro biology.
Abstract
The term cell necrobiology is introduced to comprise the life processes associated with morphological, biochemical, and molecular changes which predispose, precede, and accompany cell death, as well as the consequences and tissue response to cell death. Two alternative modes of cell death can be distinguished, apoptosis and accidental cell death, generally defined as necrosis. The wide interest in necrobiology in many disciplines stems from the realization that apoptosis, whether it occurs physiologically or as a manifestation of a pathological state, is an active mode of cell death and a subject of complex regulatory processes. A possibility exists, therefore, to interact with the regulatory machinery and thereby modulate the cell's propensity to die in response to intrinsic or exogenous signals. Flow cytometry appears to be the methodology of choice to study various aspects of necrobiology. It offers all the advantages of rapid, multiparameter analysis of large populations of individual cells to investigate the biological processes associated with cell death. Numerous methods have been developed to identify apoptotic and necrotic cells and are widely used in various disciplines, in particular in oncology and immunology. The methods based on changes in cell morphology, plasma membrane structure and transport function, function of cell organelles, DNA stability to denaturation, and endonucleolytic DNA degradation are reviewed and their applicability in the research laboratory and in the clinical setting is discussed. Improper use of flow cytometry in analysis of cell death and in data interpretation also is discussed. The most severe errors are due to i) misclassification of nuclear fragments and individual apoptotic bodies as single apoptotic cells, ii) assumption that the apoptotic index represents the rate of cell death, and iii) failure to confirm by microscopy that the cells classified by flow cytometry as apoptotic or necrotic do indeed show morphology consistent with this classification. It is expected that flow cytometry will be the dominant methodology for necrobiology. Cytometry 27:1–20, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Annexin V-affinity assay: a review on an apoptosis detection system based on phosphatidylserine exposure.

TL;DR: The basic mechanisms underlying the loss of membrane asymmetry during apoptosis are described and the novel annexin V-binding assay is discussed, an extension to the current available methods.
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Induction of Apoptosis and Cell Cycle Arrest by CP-358,774, an Inhibitor of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Tyrosine Kinase

TL;DR: CP-358,774 has potential for the treatment of tumors that are dependent on the EGFR pathway for proliferation or survival and triggers apoptosis in these cells as determined by formation of DNA fragments and other criteria.
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The role of the granuloma in expansion and dissemination of early tuberculous infection.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use quantitative intravital microscopy to reveal distinct steps of granuloma formation and assess their consequence for infection, showing that pathogenic mycobacteria exploit the granulomas during the innate immune phase for local expansion and systemic dissemination.
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Flow cytometry of apoptotic cell death.

TL;DR: This review outlines the main stages of the apoptotic cascade together with current FCM methods and states that all FCM apoptosis assays described have a solid experimental basis and have been used successfully in basic research on molecular and biochemical mechanisms of apoptosis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Apoptosis: a basic biological phenomenon with wide-ranging implications in tissue kinetics.

TL;DR: Apoptosis seems to be involved in cell turnover in many healthy adult tissues and is responsible for focal elimination of cells during normal embryonic development, and participates in at least some types of therapeutically induced tumour regression.
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A rapid and simple method for measuring thymocyte apoptosis by propidium iodide staining and flow cytometry

TL;DR: A flow cytometric method for measuring the percentage of apoptotic nuclei after propidium iodide staining in hypotonic buffer is developed and shown an excellent correlation with the results obtained with both electrophoretic and colorimetric methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identification and inhibition of the ICE/CED-3 protease necessary for mammalian apoptosis

TL;DR: A potent peptide aldehyde inhibitor has been developed and shown to prevent apoptotic events in vitro, suggesting that apopain/CPP32 is important for the initiation of apoptotic cell death.
Journal Article

Apoptosis, oncosis, and necrosis : an overview of cell death

TL;DR: Some of the typical features of apoptosis are discussed, such as budding (as opposed to blebbing and zeiosis) and the inflammatory response, and stands in contrast to apoptosis, which leads to necrosis with karyorhexis and cell shrinkage.
Journal Article

Exposure of phosphatidylserine on the surface of apoptotic lymphocytes triggers specific recognition and removal by macrophages.

TL;DR: The data suggest that macrophages specifically recognize phosphatidylserine that is exposed on the surface of lymphocytes during the development of apoptosis, and suggest that apoptotic lymphocytes lose membrane phospholipid asymmetry and expose phosphorus on the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane.
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