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Measuring Cytotoxicity by Bioluminescence Imaging Outperforms the Standard Chromium-51 Release Assay

The chromium-release assay developed in 1968 is still the most commonly used method to measure cytotoxicity by T cells and by natural killer cells. Target cells are loaded in vitro with radioactive chromium and lysis is determined by measuring chromium in the supernatant released by dying cells. Sin...

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Autores principales: Karimi, Mobin A., Lee, Eric, Bachmann, Michael H., Salicioni, Ana Maria, Behrens, Edward M., Kambayashi, Taku, Baldwin, Cynthia L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3929704/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586714
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089357
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author Karimi, Mobin A.
Lee, Eric
Bachmann, Michael H.
Salicioni, Ana Maria
Behrens, Edward M.
Kambayashi, Taku
Baldwin, Cynthia L.
author_facet Karimi, Mobin A.
Lee, Eric
Bachmann, Michael H.
Salicioni, Ana Maria
Behrens, Edward M.
Kambayashi, Taku
Baldwin, Cynthia L.
author_sort Karimi, Mobin A.
collection PubMed
description The chromium-release assay developed in 1968 is still the most commonly used method to measure cytotoxicity by T cells and by natural killer cells. Target cells are loaded in vitro with radioactive chromium and lysis is determined by measuring chromium in the supernatant released by dying cells. Since then, alternative methods have been developed using different markers of target cell viability that do not involve radioactivity. Here, we compared and contrasted a bioluminescence (BLI)-based cytotoxicity assay to the standard radioactive chromium-release assay using an identical set of effector cells and tumor target cells. For this, we stably transduced several human and murine tumor cell lines to express luciferase. When co-cultured with cytotoxic effector cells, highly reproducible decreases in BLI were seen in an effector to target cell dose-dependent manner. When compared to results obtained from the chromium release assay, the performance of the BLI-based assay was superior, because of its robustness, increased signal-to-noise ratio, and faster kinetics. The reduced/delayed detection of cytotoxicity by the chromium release method was attributable to the association of chromium with structural components of the cell, which are released quickly by detergent solubilization but not by hypotonic lysis. We conclude that the (BLI)-based measurement of cytotoxicity offers a superior non-radioactive alternative to the chromium-release assay that is more robust and quicker to perform.
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spelling pubmed-39297042014-02-25 Measuring Cytotoxicity by Bioluminescence Imaging Outperforms the Standard Chromium-51 Release Assay Karimi, Mobin A. Lee, Eric Bachmann, Michael H. Salicioni, Ana Maria Behrens, Edward M. Kambayashi, Taku Baldwin, Cynthia L. PLoS One Research Article The chromium-release assay developed in 1968 is still the most commonly used method to measure cytotoxicity by T cells and by natural killer cells. Target cells are loaded in vitro with radioactive chromium and lysis is determined by measuring chromium in the supernatant released by dying cells. Since then, alternative methods have been developed using different markers of target cell viability that do not involve radioactivity. Here, we compared and contrasted a bioluminescence (BLI)-based cytotoxicity assay to the standard radioactive chromium-release assay using an identical set of effector cells and tumor target cells. For this, we stably transduced several human and murine tumor cell lines to express luciferase. When co-cultured with cytotoxic effector cells, highly reproducible decreases in BLI were seen in an effector to target cell dose-dependent manner. When compared to results obtained from the chromium release assay, the performance of the BLI-based assay was superior, because of its robustness, increased signal-to-noise ratio, and faster kinetics. The reduced/delayed detection of cytotoxicity by the chromium release method was attributable to the association of chromium with structural components of the cell, which are released quickly by detergent solubilization but not by hypotonic lysis. We conclude that the (BLI)-based measurement of cytotoxicity offers a superior non-radioactive alternative to the chromium-release assay that is more robust and quicker to perform. Public Library of Science 2014-02-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3929704/ /pubmed/24586714 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089357 Text en © 2014 Karimi et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Karimi, Mobin A.
Lee, Eric
Bachmann, Michael H.
Salicioni, Ana Maria
Behrens, Edward M.
Kambayashi, Taku
Baldwin, Cynthia L.
Measuring Cytotoxicity by Bioluminescence Imaging Outperforms the Standard Chromium-51 Release Assay
title Measuring Cytotoxicity by Bioluminescence Imaging Outperforms the Standard Chromium-51 Release Assay
title_full Measuring Cytotoxicity by Bioluminescence Imaging Outperforms the Standard Chromium-51 Release Assay
title_fullStr Measuring Cytotoxicity by Bioluminescence Imaging Outperforms the Standard Chromium-51 Release Assay
title_full_unstemmed Measuring Cytotoxicity by Bioluminescence Imaging Outperforms the Standard Chromium-51 Release Assay
title_short Measuring Cytotoxicity by Bioluminescence Imaging Outperforms the Standard Chromium-51 Release Assay
title_sort measuring cytotoxicity by bioluminescence imaging outperforms the standard chromium-51 release assay
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3929704/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586714
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089357
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