Carboxyfluorescein FLICA Assays for Detection
of Caspase Activity
The central component of apoptosis is a
cascade of proteolytic enzymes called caspases. These enzymes
participate in a series of reactions that are triggered in response to
pro-apoptotic signals and result in the cleavage of protein
substrates, causing the disassembly of the cell1.
FLICA Apoptosis Detection Kits use a
novel approach to detect active caspases. The methodology is based on
a Fluorochrome Inhibitor of Caspases (FLICA). Once inside the cell,
the FLICA inhibitor binds covalently to the active caspase2.
These inhibitors are cell permeable and non-cytotoxic. For detection
using green fluorescence, a carboxyfluorescein-labeled fluoromethyl
ketone peptide inhibitor of caspases is used.
B-Bridge also offers
Sulforhodamine FLICA assays
that use red fluorescence.
A |
B |
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Figure 1. Suspension cells were incubated with 1 mM staurosporine
for 3 hours at 377C to induce apoptosis. Cells were then labeled
with FAM-VAD-FMK (a generic FLICA probe which binds to many
activated caspases) for 60 minutes at 377C. Cells were washed,
then Hoechst stain was added and the cells were incubated for 5
minutes. Wet-mount slides were prepared and 2 photos were taken of
the same cells. Caspase activity on the left (photo A) was
detected using a band pass filter (excitation at 488 nm, emission
at 520 nm). Nuclear staining by Hoechst stain on the right (photo
B) was revealed using a UV-filter (excitation at 365 nm, emission
at 480 nm). |
In Figure 1, photo A, only one cell
appears green it is apoptotic and stained positive for poly caspase
activity with the FAM-VAD-FMK reagent. The other cell, which is not
visible, did not bind to the reagent and therefore is not apoptotic.
The same cells, photographed at right under a different wavelength for
Hoechst stain, appear blue. The cell in the top right of photo B
(which appears green in photo A) has a very brightly stained nucleus
its DNA is condensing in the cell, a sign it is dying. The cell in the
bottom left of photo B (which is not visible in photo A) does not have
a brightly stained nucleus, therefore it is neither apoptotic nor
necrotic.