Total nucleated cell differential for blood and bone marrow using a single tube in a five‐color flow cytometer
- 5 December 2007
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Cytometry Part B: Clinical Cytometry
- Vol. 74B (2) , 91-103
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cyto.b.20382
Abstract
Background: Flow cytometry allows the use of several antibodies in addition to light scatter, and most flow cytometers will provide at least seven measurements on each cell passing through the laser beam. A skilled microscopist will classify at least 14 cell classes in bone marrow or blood. Our goal was to use the seven parameters available in our flow cytometer to provide a reliable differential count using only one tube. Methods: Peripheral blood samples were analyzed on the Beckman Coulter LH750 cell counter, and the flagging and messages from the cell counter were used to select normal or pathological samples. Samples without flags (N = 50), with >2% erythroblasts (N = 80), or with “Blast” or “Verify diff” flags (N = 54) were investigated. We used a lyse‐no‐wash method to ensure minimal loss of fragile cells with live gating on DRAQ5‐positive cells to acquire only nucleated cells. The FL‐1 to FL‐4 channels were used for the antibodies CD36‐FITC, CD203‐PE, CD138‐PE, CD45‐ECD, CD16‐Pcy5, and CD56‐Pcy5. FL‐5 was used for the DNA‐stain DRAQ5. Results: Using live gate acquisition on DRAQ5, we were able to classify total nucleated cells into 10 classes. We were unable to identify megakaryocytes, but platelets could be studied by rerunning the sample after dilution and gating on DRAQ5‐negative CD36‐posive events. Validation against digitized microscopy and cell counter showed linear correlations within each cell class with correlation coefficients that seem reasonable for cellular classification. The lowest correlation was found for basophil granulocytes. Flow cytometry detected twice as many immature neutrophils compared to microscopy. Conclusions: We have designed a one‐tube immunophenotyping panel for classification of total nucleated cells and platelets in blood or bone marrow. The seven parameters available in one single tube in our cytometer seem to be enough for reliable differential count even in difficult pathological samples. The analytical imprecision of the flow cytometer differential was much lower than that obtained with microscopy or cell counter differentials. © 2007 Clinical Cytometry Society.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spectral analysis of the DNA targeting bisalkylaminoanthraquinone DRAQ5 in intact living cellsCytometry Part A, 2006
- The Impact of Erythrocyte Lysing Procedures on the Recovery of Hematopoietic Progenitor Cells in Flow Cytometric AnalysisThe International Journal of Cell Cloning, 2005
- High-Grade Loss of Leukocytes and Hematopoietic Progenitor Cells Caused by Erythrocyte-Lysing Procedures for Flow Cytometric AnalysesJournal of Hematotherapy & Stem Cell Research, 2003
- Evaluation of red blood cell lysing solutions in the study of neutrophil oxidative burst by the DCFH assayCytometry, 2001
- An Interlaboratory Study of a Candidate Reference Method for Platelet CountingAmerican Journal of Clinical Pathology, 2001
- Characteristics of a novel deep red/infrared fluorescent cell-permeant DNA probe, DRAQ5, in intact human cells analyzed by flow cytometry, confocal and multiphoton microscopyCytometry, 2000
- Evaluation of a flow cytometric method for simultaneous leukocyte phenotyping and quantification by fluorescent microspheresCytometry, 1998
- Expression of adhesion antigens of human bone marrow megakaryocytes, circulating megakaryocytes and blood plateletsEuropean Journal of Haematology, 1992
- A rapid sample preparation technique for flow cytometric analysis of immunofluorescence allowing absolute enumeration of cell subpopulationsJournal of Immunological Methods, 1989
- Five‐dimensional flow cytometry as a new approach for blood and bone marrow differentialsCytometry, 1988