Publication: Epithelial apoptosis in mechanistically distinct methods of injury in the murine small intestine
Loading...
Date
2007
Authors
Vyas, D. ; Robertson, C.M. ; Stromberg, P.E. ; Martin, J.R. ; Dunne, W.M. ; Houchen, C.W. ; Barrett, T.A. ; Ayala, A. ; Perl, M. ; Buchman, T.G. ; Coopersmith, C.M.
item.page.secondaryauthor
item.page.director
Publisher
Murcia : F. Hernández
publication.page.editor
publication.page.department
DOI
item.page.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
Gut epithelial apoptosis is involved in the
pathophysiology of multiple diseases. This study
characterized intestinal apoptosis in three
mechanistically distinct injuries with different kinetics of
cell death. FVB/N mice were subjected to gamma
radiation, Pseudomonas aeruginosa pneumonia or
injection of monoclonal anti-CD3 antibody and
sacrificed 4, 12, or 24 hours post-injury (n=10/time
point). Apoptosis was quantified in the jejunum by
hematoxylin and eosin (H&E), active caspase-3,
terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP-mediated
nick end labeling (TUNEL), in situ oligoligation reaction
(ISOL,) cytokeratin 18, and annexin V staining.
Reproducible results were obtained only for H&E, active
caspase-3, TUNEL and ISOL, which were quantified
and compared against each other for each injury at each
time point. Kinetics of injury were different with early
apoptosis highest following radiation, late apoptosis
highest following anti CD3, and more consistent levels
following pneumonia. ISOL was the most consistent
stain and was always statistically indistinguishable from
at least 2 stains. In contrast, active caspase-3
demonstrated lower levels of apoptosis, while the
TUNEL assay had higher levels of apoptosis in the most
severely injured intestine regardless of mechanism of
injury. H&E was a statistical outlier more commonly mechanism or kinetics of injury, ISOL correlates to other
quantification methods of detecting gut epithelial
apoptosis more than any other method studied and
compares favorably to other commonly accepted
techniques of quantifying apoptosis in a large intestinal
cross sectional by balancing sensitivity and specificity
across a range of times and levels of death.
Citation
item.page.embargo
Ir a Estadísticas
Sin licencia Creative Commons.