Stewart C C, Stewart S J, Habbersett R C
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Cell Biology Group, New Mexico 87545.
Cytometry. 1989 Jul;10(4):426-32. doi: 10.1002/cyto.990100410.
Axial light loss (ALL) is the measurement of the total light lost from the laser beam at 0 degrees when a particle passes through the beam. Used in combination with the monoclonal antibody CD45, ALL can effectively resolve lymphocytes, monocytes, granulocytes, and dead cells in viable or fixed preparations of human peripheral blood. A bivariate display of ALL vs. CD45 clearly resolves all granulocytes from lymphocytes; although degranulated granulocytes cannot be resolved with forward-angle and right-angle light scatter, they are clearly resolved in right-angle scatter vs. CD45. A blood differential can be performed, with a single laser flow cytometer and three colors of fluorescence, when ALL is combined with fluoresceinated CD45 to resolve leukocytes, phycoerythrin-labeled NKH1 to resolve natural killer cells, and biotinylated CD3 in combination with DuoCHROME, the phycoerythrin/Texas red conjugate fluorochrome from Becton Dickinson, to resolve T-cells. B-cells are the only cells negative for both phycoerythrin and Texas red. When PE CD4 is included, the CD3+ CD4+ T-cell subset is resolved from the CD3+ CD4- subset comprising mainly the CD3+ CD8+ T-cell subset. The addition of propidium iodide is unnecessary since ALL clearly resolves dead cells in a viable preparation of human peripheral blood. Furthermore, since ALL resolves these cells even after fixation in paraformaldehyde, all samples can be fixed prior to analysis, thereby minimizing the potential biohazard risk.