BioTechniques (Aug 1996)

Measurement of Cell Adhesion and Migration Using Phosphor-Screen Autoradiography

  • B.A. Dalton,
  • M. Dziegielewski,
  • G. Johnson,
  • P.A. Underwood,
  • J.G. Steele

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2144/96212rr04
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 2
pp. 298 – 303

Abstract

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This study demonstrates the use of phosphor-screen autoradiography as a means of measuring cell adhesion and cell expansion on polymer surfaces. The method has particular merit in cases where a specific substrate may be opaque or biochemically incompatible with colorimetric assay methodologies. With the phosphor-screen autoradiography method, there was a linear relationship between cell number and quantitated radioactivity. The technique has also been validated by comparison with a colorimetric assay of adhesion conducted for attachment to conventional culture substrata. The data supported the view that the use of phosphor-screen autoradiography was a valid method for detecting cell attachment, and it gave equivalent results to the colorimetric assay. Furthermore, a comparison between phosphor-screen autoradiography and a dye-staining method showed that this technique can be used as a means of quantifying cellular expansion over surfaces.