When performing multicolor flow cytometric analysis, a major factor in the success of the analysis is the choice of which antibody to use with which fluorochrome. There are often many correct combinations possible. A number of factors need to be considered in making choices.
For any given monoclonal antibody, the signal-to-noise ratio of positive to negative can differ four- to six-fold depending on the fluorochrome used (see below). Also, the relative fluorochrome intensity depends on the instrument. A highly expressed antigen will be resolved with almost any fluorophore. An antigen expressed at lower density might require the higher signal-to-noise ratio provided by a bright dye, such as a PE or APC conjugate, to separate the positive cells adequately from the unlabeled cells.
The chart below shows the staining pattern of the same monoclonal antibody conjugated to 12 commonly used fluorochromes. This chart details the tremendous differences observed among different fluorophores; and it should be used as a guideline for the relative intensities of various fluorophores run on the core's cytometers.
Another great fluorochrome brightness chart and overall multicolor experiment setup reference can be found in this BD Biosciences Application Note.
Flow Cytometry
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7-Aminoactinomycin D (7-AAD), like propidium iodide (PI discussed below), is a DNA intercalating dye but 7-AAD is specific for cytosine-guanine base pairs. It is well suited for viability measurements and also for apoptosis experiments where it is often paired with annexin V conjugates. During early apoptosis, phosphatidylserine is translocated from the cytoplasmic face of the plasma membrane to the external face. Annexin V, when in the presence of Ca2+, has a high affinity for exposed cytoplasmic phosphatidylserine. Unlike propidium iodide, this dye has minimal emission bleed from the FL3 detector into the FL2 phycoerythrin detector. Whereas PI can be detected in either FL2 or FL3, although it is typically detected in FL2 of the FACSCalibur, 7-AAD is detected in FL3.
Alexa Fluor 488 has a spectrum almost identical to that of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), but with extraordinary photostability. Because of this photostability, it has become a choice for fluorescent microscopy applications and has become popular in cytometry applications. It is detected in the FL1 detector. Unlike other fluorochromes with similar emission spectra, Alexa Fluor 488 is pH insensitive over a broad range.
Alexa Fluor 633 is a practical alternative to allophycocyanin (APC) as well as Cy5. Alexa Fluor 633 conjugates can be used in multi-color flow cytometry with instruments equipped with a second red laser or red diode. It is detected in the FL4 detector of the FACSCalibur. Like other Alexa Fluor dyes, Alexa Fluor 633 exhibits uncommon photostability, making it an ideal choice for fluorescent microscopy.
A great number of different Alexa Fluor dyes exist that are beyond the scope of this introductory fluorophore section. Many manufacturers sell directly-conjugated Alexa Fluor antibodies. Thermo Fisher's Zenon Antibody Labeling Kits, which are available for all of their Alexa Fluor dyes, make it possible to rapidly and quantitatively label antibodies from a purified antibody fraction or from a crude antibody preparation, such as serum, ascites fluid or a hybridoma supernatant.
Allophycocyanin (APC) is an accessory photosynthetic pigment found in blue-green algae. APC has 6 phycocyanobilin chromophores per molecule, that are similar in structure to phycoerythrobilin, the chromophore in phycoerythrin (PE). APC tandem dyes, APC-Cy5.5 and APC-Cy7, are also available. APC has a 650-nanometer wavelength absorption maximum and a 660-nanometer fluorescence emission maximum. APC can be used in flow cytometers equipped with dual lasers for multi-color analysis. Like Alexa Fluor 633, APC is excited using the helium-neon red diode laser (633 nanometers) of the FACSCalibur and is detected using the FL4 detector.
APC-Cy7 (also written Cy7-APC) is a tandem conjugate system that combines APC and a cyanine dye (Cy7) and has an absorption maximum at ~650 nanometers. This tandem conjugate uses the efficiency of the fluorescence light energy transfer between the two fluorochromes. When excited by light from a helium-neon laser, the excited fluorochrome (APC) is able to transfer its fluorescent energy to the cyanine molecule, which then fluoresces at a longer wavelength. The resulting fluorescent emission maximum is in the deep red at approximately 767 nanometers. APC-Cy7 conjugates cannot be detected on a FACSCalibur because the FL4 detector's optical filter is centered for APC emission (660 nanometers) and not the longer red emission excited with a helium-neon laser. It is recommended that special precautions be taken with this conjugate and cells stained with them to protect the fluorochrome from long-term exposure to visible light.
Autofluorescence is a major concern in basic research flow cytometry environments, and no section on fluorophores can be considered complete without recognizing the role that cellular autofluorescence plays.
Individual cell populations have characteristic levels of autofluorescence (fluorescent signals generated by the cells themselves). Mammalian cellular autofluorescence, at least in lymphocytes, comes predominantly from pyridine and flavin nucleotides. Pyridine nucleotides are excited most efficiently by UV light (~340 nm) and have an emission maximum in the blue range at 450-470 nm. Flavin nucleotides are the primary issue in flow cytometry laboratories because those molecules are excited in the cyan-blue range (430-500 nm) of the color spectrum, which is where the flow cytometer's primary lasers emit light (488 nm). When excited, flavin nucleotide's emission (530-550 nm) is the same emission range as FITC/eGFP (green), PE (orange) and, to a lesser extent, PE-Cy5/PerCP (red emission) and PE-Cy7 (far red emission). The take-home message is that while autofluorescence is observed in all fluorescence channels, it decreases dramatically at longer wavelengths (>600 nanometers).
Carboxyfluorescein Diacetate (CFSE) can be used to track asynchronous cell division. Cell division results in sequential halving of the initial fluorescence, producing a cellular fluorescence histogram. CFSE has a green emission that is collected in the FL1 detector of a FACSCalibur.
Cy3 and Cy5 are excited by the 488-nanometer line of an argon laser and the 633-nanometer line of a helium-neon diode or laser, respectively. These conjugates can be used in flow cytometry but typically do not give the fluorescence intensity comparable to that of PE or APC. Applications where a smaller dye is required are more appropriate for these dyes. These fluorochromes are well suited for fluorescent microscopy.
Fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) is currently the most commonly used fluorescent dye for flow cytometry analysis. When excited at 488 nanometers, FITC has a green emission that is usually collected at 530 nanometers, the FL1 detector of a FACSCalibur. FITC has a high quantum yield (efficiency of energy transfer from absorption to emission fluorescence) and approximately half of the absorbed photons are emitted as fluorescent light. FITC is seldom used for fluorescent microscopy applications as it photobleaches rather quickly although in flow cytometry applications, its photobleaching effects are not observed due to a very brief interaction at the laser intercept. FITC is highly sensitive to pH extremes.
Fluorescein Proteins (see eGFP and eYFP listed in this section, as well as the references listed in the Protocols & Useful Links section of this Web site).
Green Fluorescent Protein (eGFP) can be excited at 488 nanometers with a peak emission at 509 nanometers and is detected in the FL1 detector on the FACSCalibur. The FACSCanto and LSRII and all of the resource's sorter flow cytometers are able to distinguish between concurrently expressing eGFP and eYFP cells when the proper optical filters and experimental controls exist. More detailed discussion of this molecule can be found in the references listed in the Protocols & Useful Links section of this Web site.
Peridinin Chlorophyll Protein (PerCP) has a 677-nanometer maximum emission, red, when excited at 488 nanometers and is detected on the FL3 detector of a FACSCalibur. A PerCP tandem dye is also available (PerCP-Cy5.5, also written Cy5.5-PerCP). PerCP is not suited for the high-powered laser (>150mW) applications, such as on a jet-in-air sorter like a MoFlo, due to its photobleaching characteristics.
Phycoerythrin (PE or R-PE) has a huge absorption coefficient and almost perfect quantum efficiency. In vivo, it functions to transfer light energy to chlorophyll during photosynthesis. It is one of the brightest dyes used today and emits in the yellow/orange at about 570 nanometers. Those accustomed to fluorescent microscopy may not be familiar with this fluorochrome as it photobleaches rather quickly under a microscope.
Phycoerythrin-Cy5 (PE-Cy5, also written Cy5-PE) is a tandem conjugate where PE is coupled to the cyan dye, Cy5. When excited by 488-nanometer light, the excited fluorochrome (PE) is able to transfer its fluorescent energy to the cyanine molecule, which then fluoresces at a longer wavelength in the red range at 670 nanometers. This tandem dye is known by a confusing myriad of names that including Beckman Coulter's PC5. Other PE conjugates exist, e.g., PE-Cy5.5 and PE-Cy7, that will not be discussed in this introductory fluorophore section. It is recommended that special precautions be taken with this conjugate, and cells stained with them, to protect the fluorochrome from long-term exposure to visible light.
Phycoerythrin-Texas Red (PE-Texas Red, also written Texas Red-PE) is a tandem conjugate where PE is coupled to Texas Red dye. Similar to other tandem conjugates, when excited by 488-nanometer light, the excited fluorochrome (PE) is able to transfer its fluorescent energy to the Texas Red molecule, which then fluoresces at a longer wavelength with a peak in the orange range at 612 nanometers. This tandem is also known by other names such as ECD (Electron Coupled Dye). PE-Texas Red conjugates run on a FACSCalibur will result in dull expression due to the extant optical filters. This is not observed on the other cytometers in the facility shared resource when they are equipped with the appropriate optical filters for this conjugate. There is considerable overlap of emission when running PE and PE-Texas Red specimens.
Propidium Iodide (PI) is a membrane-impermeant dye that stains by nondiscriminately intercalating into every 4th or 5th nucleic acid base pair, binding both DNA and RNA. Once bound, PI undergoes a conformational change and becomes ~40 times brighter. PI has a broad emission spectrum with a peak in the orange range at 620 nanometers. A number of assays employ, alcohol-fixed, RNAse-treated, PI stained cells or nuclei with altered DNA content to determine cell cycle compartment percentages. Propidium iodide has also been employed for many years as a marker for viability as the disrupted membranes of dead cells allow the dye to pass freely to the nucleic acids. However, this dye is very sticky; it will stick to sample tubes and, given sufficient time exposure to living cells, living cells will appear to be propidium iodide positive. Given this dye's broad emission spectrum and its sticky properties, contemporary flow cytometry labs have replaced propidium iodide with other nucleic acid dyes, e.g., 7-AAD (listed below), TO-PRO-3 iodide, or DAPI, among many others, for viability measurements, although propidium iodide remains the most commonly used dye for DNA content analysis.
Texas Red has an excitation maximum in the yellow-orange range of the color spectrum. It can best be detected using a cytometer in the facility that is equipped with a yellow laser.
Yellow Fluorescent Protein (eYFP), a yellow-shifted variant of the eGFP molecule, is also excited at 488 nanometers with a peak emission at 535 nanometers and is also detected in the FL1 detector on a FACSCalibur, However, the FACSCanto, the LSRII and the FACSAria IIu are able to distinguish between concurrently expressing eGFP and eYFP cells if the appropriate optical filters and experimental controls exist. More detailed discussion of this eyfp can be found in the references listed in the Protocols & Useful Links section of this website.