Abstract

In apoptosis, the initial self-driven suicide phase generates cellular corpses which are digested in the phagolysosomes of professional and amateur phagocytes during the subsequent waste-management phase. This ensures the complete elimination of the genetic material which often contains pathological, viral or cancerous DNA sequences. Although the phagocytic phase is critical for the efficient execution of apoptosis, there are currently few methods specifically adapted for its detailed visualization in the fixed tissue section format. To resolve this we developed new fluorescent probes for in situ research. The probes selectively visualize active phagocytic cells of any lineage (professional, amateur phagocytes or surrounding tissue cells) which engulf and digest apoptotic cell DNA. These fluorescent probes are the covalently-bound enzyme-DNA intermediates produced in a topoisomerase reaction with specific “starting” oligonucleotides. They detect a specific marker of DNase II cleavage activity, which occurs exclusively in phagolysosomes of the cells that engulfed apoptotic nuclei. The probes provide snap-shot images of the digestion process occurring in cellular organelles responsible for the actual execution of phagocytic degradation of apoptotic cell corpses. We applied the probes for visualization of the phagocytic reaction in tissue sections of normal thymus and in several human lymphomas. We also discuss the nature, stability and properties of DNase II-type breaks as a marker of phagocytic activity. This development provides a useful fluorescent tool for studies of pathologies where clearance of dying cells is essential, such as cancers, inflammation, infection and auto-immune disorders.

Highlights

  • Apoptosis is an orderly process of cellular elimination which ensures disassembly and disappearance of damaged cells

  • Starting as a self-initiated cellular suicide, it finishes as a cooperative clearance of apoptotic corpses by macrophages and other phagocytic cells

  • Our approach to detection of phagocytic clearance of apoptotic cells is based on labeling of a particular type of DNA breaks produced in this phase

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Summary

Introduction

Apoptosis is an orderly process of cellular elimination which ensures disassembly and disappearance of damaged cells. Starting as a self-initiated cellular suicide, it finishes as a cooperative clearance of apoptotic corpses by macrophages and other phagocytic cells. The full apoptotic cell clearance is divided into two phases: the self-driven cell disassembly and the externally-controlled elimination of apoptotic cell corpses by phagocytizing waste-management cells [1,4]. Efficient phagocytosis of apoptotic cells finalizes degradation of their DNA. This inhibits self-immunization, inflammation and the release of viral or tumor DNA [1,5]. Our approach to detection of phagocytic clearance of apoptotic cells is based on labeling of a particular type of DNA breaks produced in this phase

DNase II-Type Breaks and DNase I-Type Breaks in Apoptosis
Sites of Generation of DNase II Breaks in Phagocytosis of Apoptotic Cells
Fluorescent Probes for Detection of DNase II Breaks In Situ
Approaches for Preparation of Reactive VACC TOPO Probes
Results and Discussion
Materials and Instruments
Conclusion
Methods
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