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S7165 ApopTag® Red In Situ Apoptosis Detection Kit

S7165
40 assays  
Purchase on Sigma-Aldrich

Overview

Replacement Information

Key Spec Table

Key ApplicationsDetection Methods
ICC, IHC, IH(P)Fluorescent
Description
Catalogue NumberS7165
Brand Family Chemicon®
Trade Name
  • ApopTag
  • Chemicon
DescriptionApopTag® Red In Situ Apoptosis Detection Kit
OverviewThe ApopTag® Red In Situ Apoptosis Detection Kit detects apoptosis in situ by the indirect TUNEL method, utilizing an anti-digoxigenin antibody with a rhodamine fluorochrome. The kit provides indirect immunofluorescence staining for 40 samples. Results are analyzed using either fluorescence microscopy or flow cytometry (requires a special laser and filters for rhodamine).

Indirect ApopTag® Kits (S7100, S7101, S7110, S7111 and S7165) have been qualified for use in histochemical and cytochemical staining of the following specimens: formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues, cryostat sections, cell suspensions, cytospins, and cell cultures. Whole mount-methods have been developed (34, 45).

ApopTag® Peroxidase Kits staining specificity has been demonstrated by Chemicon and many other laboratories. Chemicon has tested many types of model cell and tissue systems, including: (a) human prostate, thymus, and large intestine (in-house data); (b) rat ventral prostate post-castration (21), (c) rat thymus lymphocytes treated in vitro with dexamethasone (3, 13), (d) 14-day mouse embryo limbs (1) and (e) rat mammary gland in regression after weaning (36). In the thymocyte and prostate models, agarose gel electrophoresis was used to assess the amount of DNA laddering, which peaked coincidentally with the maximum percentage of stained cells. Numerous journal publications from laboratories worldwide have established the usefulness of ApopTag® Kits. (See Sec. V. References, Publications Citing ApopTag® Kits).

ApopTag® Fluorescein and Rhodamine Kits have been tested for specific staining in these model systems: (a) human normal peripheral blood lymphocytes induced with dexamethasone as stained in cytospins, (b) rat regressing mammary gland as stained in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections, and (c) human leukemic peripheral blood lymphocytes induced with camptothecin, as stained in cell suspensions and used for quantitative flow cytometry (22).

In some instances, certain tissues contain cell types which bind any fluorescein labeled nucleotide such as that contained in the ApopTag® Fluorescein Direct Kit (S7160). It is therefore recommended that this kit (S7160) be used to stain cell suspensions, cytospins and cell cultures, but not tissue sections. Chemicon suggests the use of the ApopTag® Fluorescein Kits (S7110, S7111) or the ApopTag® Red Kit for staining tissue sections. See datasheet for references.
Materials Required but Not DeliveredSolvents and Media

a. Deionized water (dH2O)

b. Xylene

c. Ethanol: absolute, 95%, 70%, diluted in dH2O

d. Ethanol: acetic acid, 2:1 (v:v) (for tissue cryosection or cells protocols)

e. Slide mounting medium (Antifade)



Solutions

a. 1% paraformaldehyde in PBS, pH 7.4 (methanol-free formaldehyde for tissue cryosections or cells). See Sec. IV. Appendix, TECH NOTE #2: Fixatives and fixation.

b. 10% (v:v) neutral buffered formalin (for fixation before paraffin- embedding). See Sec. IV. Appendix, TECH NOTE #2: Fixatives and fixation.

c. PBS (50 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.4, 200 mM NaCl)

d. Protein Digesting Enzyme or proteinase K (for paraffin-embedded tissue protocol). Prepare a 5 mg/mL stock in PBS and store in small frozen aliquots.

e. 0.5-1.0 μg/mL Propidium Iodide in Antifade (S7112)

f. 0.5-1.0 μg/mL DAPI (4'-6' diamino-2-phenylindole) in Antifade (S7113)

Materials

a. Silanized glass slides

b. Glass coverslips (for oil immersion objective, use 22 x 50 mm)

c. Adjustable micropipettors

d. Glass or plastic coplin jars

e. Forceps for handling plastic coverslips (optional)

f. Humidified chamber

g. 37°C covered water bath, or incubator at 37°C

Equipment

Light microscope equipped with brightfield optics (40x and 10x objectives) and also equipped for fluorescence. See Sec. IV. Appendix, TECH NOTE #6: Required fluorescence filters.
Background InformationApoptosis is a form of cell death that eliminates compromised or superfluous cells. It is controlled by multiple signaling and effector pathways that mediate active responses to external growth, survival, or death factors. Cell cycle checkpoint controls are linked to apoptotic enzyme cascades, and the integrity of these and other links can be genetically compromised in many diseases, such as cancer. There are many books in print and hundreds of recent review articles about all aspects of apoptosis (e.g. 7, 11, 19, 24, 39, 42) and the methods for detecting it (e.g. 10, 32, 36).

Of all the aspects of apoptosis, the defining characteristic is a complete change in cellular morphology. As observed by electron microscopy, the cell undergoes shrinkage, chromatin margination, membrane blebbing, nuclear condensation and then segmentation, and division into apoptotic bodies which may be phagocytosed (11, 19, 24). The characteristic apoptotic bodies are short-lived and minute, and can resemble other cellular constituents when viewed by brightfield microscopy. DNA fragmentation in apoptotic cells is followed by cell death and removal from the tissue, usually within several hours (7). A rate of tissue regression as rapid as 25% per day can result from apparent apoptosis in only 2-3% of the cells at any one time (6). Thus, the quantitative measurement of an apoptotic index by morphology alone can be difficult.

DNA fragmentation is usually associated with ultrastructural changes in cellular morphology in apoptosis (26, 38). In a number of well-researched model systems, large fragments of 300 kb and 50 kb are first produced by endonucleolytic degradation of higher-order chromatin structural organization. These large DNA fragments are visible on pulsed-field electrophoresis gels (5, 43, 44). In most models, the activation of Ca2+-and Mg2+-dependent endonuclease activity further shortens the fragments by cleaving the DNA at linker sites between nucleosomes (3). The ultimate DNA fragments are multimers of about 180 bp nucleosomal units. These multimers appear as the familiar âDNA ladderâ seen on standard agarose electrophoresis gels of DNA extracted from many kinds of apoptotic cells (e.g. 3, 7,13, 35, 44).

Another method for examining apoptosis via DNA fragmentation is by the TUNEL assay, (13) which is the basis of ApopTag® technology. The DNA strand breaks are detected by enzymatically labeling the free 3'-OH termini with modified nucleotides. These new DNA ends that are generated upon DNA fragmentation are typically localized in morphologically identifiable nuclei and apoptotic bodies. In contrast, normal or proliferative nuclei, which have relatively insignificant numbers of DNA 3'-OH ends, usually do not stain with the kit. ApopTag® Kits detect single-stranded (25) and double-stranded breaks associated with apoptosis. Drug-induced DNA damage is not identified by the TUNEL assay unless it is coupled to the apoptotic response (8). In addition, this technique can detect early-stage apoptosis in systems where chromatin condensation has begun and strand breaks are fewer, even before the nucleus undergoes major morphological changes (4, 8).

Apoptosis is distinct from accidental cell death (necrosis). Numerous morphological and biochemical differences that distinguish apoptotic from necrotic cell death are summarized in the following table (adapted with permission from reference 39). ApopTag® In Situ Apoptosis Detection Kits distinguish apoptosis from necrosis by specifically detecting DNA cleavage and chromatin condensation associated with apoptosis. However, there may be some instances where cells exhibiting necrotic morphology may stain lightly (14, 29) or, in rare instances, DNA fragmentation can be absent or incomplete in induced apoptosis (11). It is, therefore, important to evaluate ApopTag® staining results in conjunction with morphological criteria. Visualization of positive ApopTag® results should reveal focal in situ staining inside early apoptotic nuclei and apoptotic bodies. This positive staining directly correlates with the more typical biochemical and morphological aspects of apoptosis.

Since an understanding of cell morphology is critical for data interpretation and because of the potential for experimentally modifying or overcoming normal apoptotic controls, the following strategy is advised. When researching a new system, the staging and correlation of apoptotic morphology and DNA fragmentation should be characterized. In some tissues, cytoplasmic shrinkage may be indicated by a clear space surrounding the cell. The nuclear morphology of positive cells should be carefully observed at high magnification (400x-1000x). Early staged positive, round nuclei may have observable chromatin margination. Condensed nuclei of middle stages, and apoptotic bodies, usually are stained. Apoptotic bodies may be found either in the extracellular space or inside of phagocytic cells. It is highly recommended that less experienced observers should refer to illustrations of dying cells for comparison with new data (e.g. 11, 19, 24).

An additional, although far less sensitive, method of confirming ApopTag® staining results is the detection of DNA fragmentation on agarose gels. If a large percent of the cells in the tissue are apoptotic, then electrophoresis of extracted total genomic DNA and standard dye staining can be used to corroborate the in situ staining. However, the single-cell sensitivity of ApopTag® histochemistry is far higher than this method. DNA laddering data of comparable sensitivity may be obtained in several other ways. These include methods for selectively extracting the low molecular weight DNA (15), for preparing radiolabeled DNA (30, 40) in combination with resin-bed purification of DNA (12), and for DNA amplification by PCR (35).



The in situ staining of DNA strand breaks detected by the TUNEL assay and subsequent visualization by light microscopy gives biologically significant data about apoptotic cells which may be a small percentage of the total population (13, 16). Apoptotic cells stained positive with ApopTag® Kits are easier to detect and their identification is more certain, as compared to the examination of simply histochemically stained tissues. Another feature of ApopTag® is that quantitative results can be obtained using flow cytometry, since end-labeling methodology detects apoptotic cells with a >10-fold higher sensitivity than necrotic cells (14,17). In addition, the occurrence of DNA fragmentation with regard to the cell cycle phase of apoptotic cells can be examined using the TUNEL assay and flow cytometry (16,18).
References
Product Information
Components
  • Equilibration Buffer 90416 3.0 mL -15°C to -25°C
  • Reaction Buffer 90417 2.0 mL -15°C to -25°C
  • TdT Enzyme 90418 0.64 mL -15°C to -25°C
  • Stop/Wash Buffer 90419 20 mL -15°C to -25°C
  • Blocking Solution 90425 2.6 mL -15°C to -25°C
  • Anti-Digoxigenin-Rhodamine* 90429 2.1 mL 2°C to 8°C
  • Plastic Coverslips 90421 100 ea. Room Temp.
  • *affinity purified sheep polyclonal antibody
  • Number of tests per kit: Sufficient materials are provided to stain 40 tissue specimens of approximately 5 cm2 each when used according to instructions. Reaction Buffer will be fully consumed before other reagents when kits are used for slide-mounted specimens.
Detection methodFluorescent
HS Code3002 15 90
Quality LevelMQ100
Applications
ApplicationThe ApopTag Red In Situ Apoptosis Detection Kit detects apoptosis in situ by the indirect TUNEL method, utilizing an anti-digoxigenin antibody with a rhodamine fluorochrome.
Key Applications
  • Immunocytochemistry
  • Immunohistochemistry
  • Immunohistochemistry (Paraffin)
Application NotesINTRODUCTION

ApopTag® In Situ Apoptosis Detection Kits label apoptotic cells in research samples by modifying genomic DNA utilizing terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) for detection of positive cells by specific staining.

This manual contains information and protocols for the ApopTag® Red Apoptosis Detection Kit (S7165).

Principles of the Procedure

The reagents provided in all ApopTag® Kits are designed to label the free 3'OH DNA termini in situ with chemically labeled and unlabeled nucleotides. The nucleotides contained in the Reaction Buffer are enzymatically added to the DNA by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) (13, 31). TdT catalyzes a template-independent addition of nucleotide triphosphates to the 3'-OH ends of double-stranded or single-stranded DNA. The incorporated nucleotides form an oligomer composed of digoxigenin or fluorescein nucleotide and unlabeled nucleotide in a random sequence. The ratio of labeled to unlabeled nucleotide in ApopTag® Kits is optimized to promote anti-digoxigenin antibody binding, or to minimize fluorescein self-quenching. The exact length of the oligomer added has not been measured.The ApopTag® system differs significantly from previously described in situ labeling techniques for apoptosis (13, 16, 38, 46), in which avidin binding to cellular biotin can be a source of error. The digoxigenin/anti-digoxigenin system has been found to be equally sensitive to avidin/biotin systems (22). The sole natural source of digoxigenin is the digitalis plant. Immunochemically-similar ligands for binding of the anti-digoxigenin antibody are generally insignificant in animal tissues, ensuring low background staining. Affinity purified sheep polyclonal antibody is the specific anti-digoxigenin reagent used in ApopTag® Kits. This antibody exhibits <1% cross-reactivity with the major vertebrate steroids. In addition, the Fc portion of this antibody has been removed by proteolytic digestion to eliminate any non-specific adsorption to cellular Fc receptors.

Results using ApopTag® Kits have been widely published (see Sec. V. References, Publications Citing ApopTag® Kits). The ApopTag® product line provides various options in experimental design. A researcher can choose to detect staining by brightfield or fluorescence microscopy or by flow cytometry, depending on available expertise and equipment. There are also opportunities to study other proteins of interest in the context of apoptosis when using ApopTag® Kits. By using antibodies conjugated with an enzyme other than peroxidase and an appropriate choice of substrate, it is possible to simultaneously examine another protein and apoptosis using ApopTag® Peroxidase Kits. There is also a choice of fluorophores (fluorescein and rhodamine) using ApopTag® technology. Flexibility exists in choosing antibody-fluor combinations to study other important proteins.
Biological Information
Physicochemical Information
Dimensions
Materials Information
Toxicological Information
Safety Information according to GHS
Safety Information
Product Usage Statements
Usage Statement
  • Unless otherwise stated in our catalog or other company documentation accompanying the product(s), our products are intended for research use only and are not to be used for any other purpose, which includes but is not limited to, unauthorized commercial uses, in vitro diagnostic uses, ex vivo or in vivo therapeutic uses or any type of consumption or application to humans or animals.
Storage and Shipping Information
Storage Conditions1. Store the kit at -15°C to -25°C until the first use. After the first use, if the kit will be used within three months, store the TdT Enzyme (90418) at -15°C to -25°C and store the remaining components at 2°C to 8°C.

2. Protect the anti-digoxigenin rhodamine antibody (90429) from unnecessary exposure to light.

Precautions

1. The following kit components contain potassium cacodylate (dimethylarsinic acid) as a buffer: Equilibration Buffer (90416), Reaction Buffer (90417), and TdT Enzyme (90418). These components are harmful if swallowed; avoid contact with skin and eyes (wear gloves, glasses) and wash areas of contact immediately.

2. Antibody Conjugate (90429) and Blocking Solution (90425) contain 0.08% sodium azide as a preservative.

3. TdT Enzyme (90418) contains glycerol and will not freeze at -20°C. For maximum shelf life, do not warm this reagent to room temp. before dispensing.
Packaging Information
Material Size40 assays
Transport Information
Supplemental Information
Specifications
Global Trade Item Number
Catalogue Number GTIN
S7165 08436037122859

Documentation

ApopTag® Red In Situ Apoptosis Detection Kit SDS

Title

Safety Data Sheet (SDS) 

References

Reference overviewApplicationPub Med ID
Enhanced expression of VEGF-A in β cells increases endothelial cell number but impairs islet morphogenesis and β cell proliferation.
Qing Cai,Marcela Brissova,Rachel B Reinert,Fong Cheng Pan,Priyanka Brahmachary,Marie Jeansson,Alena Shostak,Aramandla Radhika,Greg Poffenberger,Susan E Quaggin,W Gray Jerome,Daniel J Dumont,Alvin C Powers,Fong Cheng Pan,W Gray Jerome
Developmental biology  367  2012

Show Abstract
22546694 22546694
Role of Gadd45a in Wip1-dependent regulation of intestinal tumorigenesis.
O N Demidov,Y Zhu,C Kek,A R Goloudina,N Motoyama,D V Bulavin
Cell death and differentiation  19  2012

Show Abstract
22555459 22555459
Protective effects of dispersive viscoelastics on corneal endothelial damage in a toxic anterior segment syndrome animal model.
Jong-Suk Song,Jeong-Hwa Heo,Hyo-Myung Kim
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science  53  2012

Show Abstract
22899758 22899758
Cone degeneration following rod ablation in a reversible model of retinal degeneration.
Choi RY, Engbretson GA, Solessio EC, Jones GA, Coughlin A, Aleksic I, Zuber ME
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci  52  364-73. Print 2011.  2011

Show Abstract
20720220 20720220
Metaflumizone-amitraz (Promeris)-associated pustular acantholytic dermatitis in 22 dogs: evidence suggests contact drug-triggered pemphigus foliaceus.
Ursula Oberkirchner,Keith E Linder,Stan Dunston,Petra Bizikova,Thierry Olivry
Veterinary dermatology  22  2011

Show Abstract
21418349 21418349
ADIPONECTIN INDUCED ERK AND AKT PHOSPHORYLATION PROTECTS AGAINST PANCREATIC BETA CELL APOPTOSIS AND INCREASES INSULIN GENE EXPRESSION AND SECRETION.
Wijesekara N, Krishnamurthy M, Bhattacharjee A, Suhail A, Sweeney G, Wheeler MB
J Biol Chem  2010

Show Abstract
20709750 20709750
Potentiation of femtosecond laser intratissue refractive index shaping (IRIS) in the living cornea with sodium fluorescein.
Nagy LJ, Ding L, Xu L, Knox WH, Huxlin KR
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science  51  850-856  2010

Show Abstract
19815735 19815735
Epithelial ablation of Bcl-XL increases sensitivity to oxygen without disrupting lung development.
Staversky, RJ; Vitiello, PF; Yee, M; Callahan, LM; Dean, DA; O'Reilly, MA
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology  43  376-85  2010

Show Abstract
19880821 19880821
Complement and alcoholic liver disease: role of C1q in the pathogenesis of ethanol-induced liver injury in mice.
Cohen JI, Roychowdhury S, McMullen MR, Stavitsky AB, Nagy LE
Gastroenterology  139  664-74, 674.e1. Epub 2010 Apr 21.  2010

Show Abstract
20416309 20416309
The balance of autocrine VEGF-A and VEGF-C determines podocyte survival.
Janina Müller-Deile,Kirstin Worthmann,Moin Saleem,Irini Tossidou,Hermann Haller,Mario Schiffer
American journal of physiology. Renal physiology  297  2009

Show Abstract
19828679 19828679

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ApopTag® Red In Situ Apoptosis Detection Kit

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Life Science Research > Cell Analysis > Cell-based Assays > Apoptosis / Cell Death Assays