Autor: |
Torous, Dorothea K., Hall, Nikki E., Dertinger, Stephen D., Diehl, Marilyn S., Illi‐Love, Anne H., Cederbrant, Karin, Sandelin, Kerstin, Bolcsfoldi, George, Ferguson, Lynnette R., Pearson, Amira, Majeska, Jenness B., Tarca, James P., Hewish, Dean R., Doughty, Larissa, Fenech, Michael, Weaver, James L., Broud, Dennis D., Gatehouse, David G., Hynes, Geoffrey M., Kwanyuen, Puntipa, McLean, Jack, McNamee, James P., Parenteau, Monique, Van Hoof, Veerle, Vanparys, Philippe, Lenarczyk, Marek, Siennicka, Joanna, Litwinska, Bogumila, Slowikowska, Maria G., Harbach, Philip R., Johnson, Carol W., Zhao, Shuou, Aaron, Charles S., Lynch, Anthony M., Marshall, Ian C., Rodgers, Brenda, Tometsko, Carol R. |
Zdroj: |
Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis; 2001, Vol. 38 Issue: 1 p59-68, 10p |
Abstrakt: |
This laboratory previously described a single‐laser flow cytometric method, which effectively resolves micronucleated erythrocyte populations in rodent peripheral blood samples. Even so, the rarity and variable size of micronuclei make it difficult to configure instrument settings consistently and define analysis regions rationally to enumerate the cell populations of interest. Murine erythrocytes from animals infected with the malaria parasite Plasmodium bergheicontain a high prevalence of erythrocytes with a uniform DNA content. This biological model for micronucleated erythrocytes offers a means by which the micronucleus analysis regions can be rationally defined, and a means for controlling interexperimental variation. The experiments described herein were performed to extend these studies by testing whether malaria‐infected erythrocytes could also be used to enhance the transferability of the method, as well as control intra‐ and interlaboratory variation. For these studies, blood samples from mice infected with malaria, or treated with vehicle or the clastogen methyl methanesulfonate, were fixed and shipped to collaborating laboratories for analysis. After configuring instrumentation parameters and guiding the position of analysis regions with the malaria‐infected blood samples, micronucleated reticulocyte frequencies were measured (20,000 reticulocytes per sample). To evaluate both intra‐ and interlaboratory variation, five replicates were analyzed per day, and these analyses were repeated on up to five separate days. The data of 14 laboratories presented herein indicate that transferability of this flow cytometric technique is high when instrumentation is guided by the biological standard Plasmodium berghei.Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 38:59–68, 2001 © 2001 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. |
Databáze: |
Supplemental Index |
Externí odkaz: |
|