Hobbs Cheryl A, Recio Leslie, Winters John, Witt Kristine L
Toxicology Program, ILS, Inc.;
Toxicology Program, ILS, Inc.
J Vis Exp. 2020 Mar 24(157). doi: 10.3791/59955.
The comet assay is gaining popularity as a means to assess DNA damage in cultured cells and tissues, particularly following exposure to chemicals or other environmental stressors. Use of the comet assay in regulatory testing for genotoxic potential in rodents has been driven by adoption of an Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) test guideline in 2014. Comet assay slides are typically prepared from fresh tissue at the time of necropsy; however, freezing tissue samples can avoid logistical challenges associated with simultaneous preparation of slides from multiple organs per animal and from many animals per study. Freezing also enables shipping samples from the exposure facility to a different laboratory for analysis, and storage of frozen tissue facilitates deferring a decision to generate DNA damage data for a given organ. The alkaline comet assay is useful for detecting exposure-related DNA double- and single-strand breaks, alkali-labile lesions, and strand breaks associated with incomplete DNA excision repair. However, DNA damage can also result from mechanical shearing or improper sample processing procedures, confounding the results of the assay. Reproducibility in collection and processing of tissue samples during necropsies may be difficult to control due to fluctuating laboratory personnel with varying levels of experience in harvesting tissues for the comet assay. Enhancing consistency through refresher training or deployment of mobile units staffed with experienced laboratory personnel is costly and may not always be feasible. To optimize consistent generation of high quality samples for comet assay analysis, a method for homogenizing flash frozen cubes of tissue using a customized tissue mincing device was evaluated. Samples prepared for the comet assay by this method compared favorably in quality to fresh and frozen tissue samples prepared by mincing during necropsy. Moreover, low baseline DNA damage was measured in cells from frozen cubes of tissue following prolonged storage.
彗星试验作为一种评估培养细胞和组织中DNA损伤的方法越来越受欢迎,尤其是在暴露于化学物质或其他环境应激源之后。2014年经济合作与发展组织(OECD)试验指南的采用推动了彗星试验在啮齿动物遗传毒性潜力监管测试中的应用。彗星试验载玻片通常在尸检时从新鲜组织制备;然而,冷冻组织样本可以避免与每只动物同时从多个器官以及每项研究从多只动物制备载玻片相关的后勤挑战。冷冻还能使样本从暴露设施运送到不同实验室进行分析,并且冷冻组织的储存便于推迟决定是否针对特定器官生成DNA损伤数据。碱性彗星试验可用于检测与暴露相关的DNA双链和单链断裂、碱不稳定损伤以及与不完全DNA切除修复相关的链断裂。然而,DNA损伤也可能由机械剪切或不当的样本处理程序导致,从而混淆试验结果。由于参与尸检的实验室人员经验水平不同且人员波动,尸检期间组织样本采集和处理的可重复性可能难以控制。通过复习培训或部署配备有经验丰富实验室人员的移动单位来提高一致性成本高昂,而且可能并不总是可行的。为了优化用于彗星试验分析的高质量样本的一致生成,评估了一种使用定制组织切碎装置将快速冷冻的组织块均质化的方法。通过这种方法制备的用于彗星试验的样本在质量上优于尸检期间切碎制备的新鲜和冷冻组织样本。此外,在长时间储存后的冷冻组织块的细胞中测得的基线DNA损伤较低。