Cell flow cytometry of fixed and unfixed bursal and thymic cells.

Analysis in a cell flow cytometer (Ortho Spectrum III, Ortho Inst.) of single cell suspensions from the bursa and thymus of 20-day embryos revealed two distinct cell clusters. The two clusters were less apparent after fixation of the cells in paraformaldehyde and assumed a comet-like appearance at 30 min fixation in ethyl alcohol (EA). The G (postmitotic), S [deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis], and G2/M (premitotic and mitotic) phases of the life cycle were visualized in two cell flow cytometers (Ortho Spectrum III and FACS IV, Bectin Dickinson) after treating the cells with EA, ribonuclease (RNase), and propidium iodide (PI, a fluorescent dye). Bursal cell suspensions exposed to the EA-RNase-PI protocol and stored for 3 weeks in phosphate-buffered saline showed minor changes in the G1 coefficient of variation, G1, and S percentages, but marked changes in these parameters occurred after 6 weeks of storage. Thymic cells treated in a similar fashion could not be maintained for 3 weeks. Bursal and thymic cells may remain in the EA for one day and possibly as long as 7 days prior to preparing them for DNA life cycle analysis. Paraformaldehyde was not a satisfactory cell fixative for assessing a cell's DNA life cycle.