Glutaraldehyde – A Subtle Tool in the Investigation of Healthy and Pathologic Red Blood Cells
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2019
abstract:
Glutaraldehyde is a well-known substance used in biomedical research to fix cells. Since
hemolytic anemias are often associated with red blood cell shape changes deviating
from the biconcave disk shape, conservation of these shapes for imaging in general
and 3D-imaging in particular, like confocal microscopy, scanning electron microscopy
or scanning probe microscopy is a common desire. Along with the fixation comes an
increase in the stiffness of the cells. In the context of red blood cells this increased rigidity
is often used to mimic malaria infected red blood cells because they are also stiffer than
healthy red blood cells. However, the use of glutaraldehyde is associated with numerous
pitfalls: (i) while the increase in rigidity by an application of increasing concentrations of
glutaraldehyde is an analog process, the fixation is a rather digital event (all or none); (ii)
addition of glutaraldehyde massively changes osmolality in a concentration dependent
manner and hence cell shapes can be distorted; (iii) glutaraldehyde batches differ in
their properties especially in the ratio of monomers and polymers; (iv) handling pitfalls,
like inducing shear artifacts of red blood cell shapes or cell density changes that needs
to be considered, e.g., when working with cells in flow; (v) staining glutaraldehyde
treated red blood cells need different approaches compared to living cells, for instance,
because glutaraldehyde itself induces a strong fluorescence. Within this paper we
provide documentation about the subtle use of glutaraldehyde on healthy and pathologic
red blood cells and how to deal with or circumvent pitfalls.
Iris type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Keywords: glutaraldehyde, erythrocytes, hemolytic anemia, fixation, cell shapes, stiffness, osmolality,
batch variation
List of contributors:
Abay, Asena; Simionato, Greta; Chachanidze, Revaz; Bogdanova, Anna; Hertz, Laura; Bianchi, Paola; van den Akker, Emile; von Lindern, Marieke; Leonetti, Marc; Minetti, Giampaolo; Wagner, Christian; Kaestner, Lars
Published in: