New, simple flow cytometry technique to discriminate between internalized and membrane‐bound particles in phagocytosis

Abstract
This report describes a new flow cytometry technique to measure phagocytic activity and discriminate simultaneously between internalized and membranebound particles. Fluorescein-conjugated heat-killed Candida albicans (F-Ca) are opsonized with purified antibodies or normal human serum and used as targets for human polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMN). The procedure is based on the observation that F-Ca lose their green fluorescence and acquire red fluorescence upon incubation with ethidium bromide (EB) through the resonance energy-transfer phenomenon occurring between the two fluorochromes. PMN are incubated with opsonized F-Ca particles for 20 min at 37°C or, as a control, at 4°C and in the presence of cytochalasin B, an inhibitor of the phagocytic process that does not affect membrane binding of F-Ca. EB is added, and green and red fluorescence associated with PMN is evaluated using a mercury-lamp-powered instrument. Because EB does not penetrate intact cell membranes, internalized particles are not affected by EB and remain green, whereas membrane-bound particles assume an intense red stain. By means of contour plot analysis, the number of PMN containing and/or binding F-Ca particles can be readily assessed. The method described here allows precise quantitative analysis of the phagocytic process on the part of human PMN in a single, one-step assay that does not require sophisticated instrumentation or reagents and should prove to become a test suitable for clinical purposes.