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Published: Mar 20, 2012 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.196 Views: 19274
Abstract
Fluorescence Activated Cell Sorting (FACS) is a sensitive method to count mitotic cells. Cells are stained with an antibody that recognizes an antigen present only in mitotic cells, combined with propidium iodide (PI) to stain DNA. Two-dimensional FACS scanning allows the differential quantitation of G2 and mitotic cells. Several antibodies to different mitotic markers have been used in the community, including antibodies to MPM-2 antigens present in mitotic cells. MPM-2 recognizes a phosphorylated epitope (LTPLK or YWFSPL) 6, 7 in a distinct class of phosphoproteins including MAP2, HSP70, cdc25, and DNA topoisomerase IIα, most of which are phosphorylated at the onset of mitosis. The commercial availability and specificity of antibodies to histone H3 phosphorylated at threonine 11, which is present only in mitotic cells, has also been widely used to detect mitosis cells.
Keywords: Mitotic cellsMaterials and Reagents
Equipment
Procedure
Category
Cancer Biology > Proliferative signaling > Cell biology assays
Cell Biology > Cell-based analysis > Flow cytometry
Cell Biology > Cell signaling > Phosphorylation
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