Cellular Senescence Detection Kit - SPiDER-βGal

Cellular Senescence Detection Kit - SPiDER-βGal

Senescence Cell Detection

  • Quantify SA-βgal
  • Applicable for Living Cell and Fixed Cell
  • Staining time 30 min.
  • Product code
    SG04  Cellular Senescence Detection Kit - SPiDER-βGal
Unit size Price Item Code
1 plate $240.00 SG04-01
3 plates $546.00 SG04-03
10 plates $1,197.00 SG04-10

The same amount of SG03-10 is with SG04-03.
*Difference between SG03 and SG04 is the only amount of reagent.

Senescence Products for each sample
For cell samples by fluorescence microscopy or flow cytometry, see the information below.
For cell samples by plate reader, click here for the product page.
For tissue samples, click here for the product page.

Order
Quantity may be adjusted within the cart.
Component
1 plate ・SPiDER-βGal
・Bafilomycin A1
×1
×1
3 plates ・SPiDER-βGal
・Bafilomycin A1
×3
×3
10 plates ・SPiDER-βGal
・Bafilomycin A1
×10
×10

Description

DNA damages of the normal cells are caused by repeated cell division and oxidative stress. Cellular Senescence, a state of irreversible growth arrest, can be triggered in order to prevent DNA-damaged cells from growing. Senescence-associated β-galactosidase (SA-β-gal), which is overexpressed in senescent cells, has been widely used as a marker of cellular senescence. Although X-gal is a well known reagent to detect SA-β-gal, these are following disadvantages: 1) requirement of fixed cells due to the poor cell-permeability, 2) low quantitative capability because of the difficulty of the determination of visual difference between stained cells and not stained cells, 3) requirement of a long time of staining.

Cellular Senescence Detection Kit – SPiDER-βGal allows to detect SA-β-gal with high sensitivity and ease of use. SPiDER-βGal is a new reagent to detect β-galactosidase which possesses a high cell-permeability and a high retentivity inside cells. SA-β-gal are detected specifically not only in living cells but also fixed cells by using a reagent (Bafilomycin A1) to inhibit endogenous β-galactosidase activity. Therefore, SPiDER-βGal can be applied to quantitative analysis by flow cytometry.

Recent work from Dr. Kim et al. at Mayo Clinic used our Cellular Senescence Detection Kit – SPiDER-βGal to evaluate cellular senescence in endothelial cells. They did staining of SA-βGal in cells in atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis (ARAS) and co-stained the cells with CD31 which is a marker of endothelilal cells. They showed that ARAS + Elamipretide* treatment slightly improved endothelial cell senescence. Unlike commercial available probes used for detection of β-Galactosidase, SPiDER-βGal contained in the kit possesses high intracellular retention. The key feature of this product is that it can be used to co-stain SA-β-Gal and other markers. Our kit is a useful tool for cellular senescence research.
*Elamipretide: mitochondria-targeted peptide

For more information on data, please refer to the publication below:
S. R. Kim, A. Eirin, X. Zhang, A. Lerman and L. O. Lerman, “Mitochondrial Protection Partly Mitigates Kidney Cellular Senescence in Swine Atherosclerotic Renal Artery Stenosis.”, Cell. Physiol. Biochem. ., 2019, 52, 617.

 

Manual

Technical info

Simple Procedure

Difference between X-Gal method and Cellular Senescence Detection Kit – SPiDER-βGal I

Why is Bafilomycin A1 added?

Endogenous β-galactosidase existing in living cells interfere with selective detection of SA-β-Gal. Bafilomycin A1 is an inhibitor of ATPase in lysosome. pH in lysosome is kept neutral by adding Bafilomycin A1. Cellular Senescence Detection Kit - SPiDER-βGal contains Bafilomycin A1 which allows to detect SA-β-Gal selectively. Bafilomycin A1 is utilized for living cell assays only. Bafilomycin A1 is not used in fixed cells because intracellular pH is controlled with the buffer.

Difference between X-Gal method and Cellular Senescence Detection Kit - SPiDER-βGal II

Our kit allows quantification of SA-β-Gal using flow cytometry.

For plate reader detection, please refer Cellular Senescence Plate Assay Kit - SPiDER-βGal.

Co-staining of SA- β-gal and DNA Damage marker in WI-38 cells


 

Procedure:

1. Passage 1 and 10 of WI-38 were used. The procedure was followed as the manual within the kit.

2. Add 4% PFA/PBS to the cells and incubate for 15 minutes at room temperature

3. Wash the cells 3 times with PBS

4. Add 0.1% Triton X-100/PBS to cells and incubate for 30 minutes at room temperature

5. Wash the cells 3 times with PBS

6. Add 1% BSA/PBS to the cells and incubate for 1 hour at the room temperature

7. Add anti- γ-H2AX antibody (rabbit) diluted with 1% BSA/PBS to the cells and incubate at 4℃ overnight

8. Wash the cells 3 times with PBS

9. Add Anti- rabbit secondary antibody (Alexa Fluor 647) diluted with 1% BSA/PBS to the cells and incubate at room temperature for 2 hours

10. Wash cells 3 times with PBS

11. Add 2 μg/ml DAPI (code: D523) diluted with PBS to the cells and incubate for 10 minutes at room temperature

12. Wash cells 3 times with PBS and observe under a confocal microscope

Co-staining of SA- β-gal and DNA Damage marker in fixed WI-38 cells

Preparation of SPiDER-βGal working solution
Dilute the SPiDER-βGal DMSO stock solution 2,000 times *1 with McIlvaine buffer (pH 6.0).
*1 Fixation and permeablization could leads to lower sensitivity (Figure 1), if you need higher signals,dilute the SPiDER-βGal DMSO stock solution 500 – 1,000 times with the McIlvaine buffer (Figure 2).

Preparation of McIlvaine buffer (pH 6.0)
Mix 0.1 mol/l citric acid solution (3.7 ml) and 0.2 mol/l sodium phosphate solution (6.3 ml). Confirm the pH is 6.0. If the pH is not 6.0, adjust the pH by adding either citric acid solution or sodium phosphate solution. Dilute this buffer 5 times with ultrapure water.

Staining procedure (35 mm dish)
1. Prepare cells on 35 mm dish for assay and culture the dish at 37℃ overnight in a 5% CO2 incubator.
2. Remove the culture medium. Add 2 ml of 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) /PBS solution to the cells and incubate at room temperature for 3 minutes *2.
*2 Avoid a longer treatment period, which leads to decrease in SA-β-gal activity.
3. Remove the supernatant, and wash the cells 3 times with 2 ml of PBS.
4. Add 2 ml of SPiDER-βGal working solution and incubate at 37℃ for 30 minutes*3.
*3 We recommend not to use a 5% CO2 incubator for fixed cell experiments. If incubation is done in a 5% CO2 incubator, the pH of the buffer may become acidic. Acidic pH results in higher background from the endogenous β-galactosidase activity and it would be difficult to distinguish between normal cells and senescent cells.
5. After removing the supernatant, wash the cells twice with PBS.
6. Add 0.1% Triton X-100/PBS to cells and incubate for 30 minutes at room temperature.
7. Wash the cells twice with PBS.
8. Add 1% BSA/PBS to the cells and incubate for 1 hour at the room temperature
9. Add anti- γ-H2AX antibody (mouse) diluted with 1% BSA/PBS to the cells and incubate at 4℃ overnight.
10. Wash the cells 3 times with PBS.
11. Add anti- mouse secondary antibody (Cy5) diluted with 1% BSA/PBS to the cells and incubate at room temperature for 1 hour.
12. Wash cells twice with PBS and observe under a fluorescence microscope.

Markers of Senescent Cells

SA-β-gal detection for tissue

In this published article, SA-β-gal was detected using SPiDER-βGal on tissue samples from a diabetic model mouse.

Note: SPiDER-βGal [Code: SG02] is used in this staining.

After slicing the frozen tissue, it was fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for 20 minutes at room temperature. Then it was washed with PBS and observed.

For details of the experimental operation and data, refer to Reference 2) below.

SA-β-gal detection for T cells (floating cells)

The research group by professor Masakatsu Yamashita at Ehime University Graduate School of Medicine has shown that a protein called Menin controls T cell exhaustion, aging, and maintains normal immune function.

By using this kit, they confirmed that SG03 has the ability to detect induced cell senescence by stimulating TCR (T cell receptor) in the presence of interleukin 2 (IL-II) in naive CD8+ T cells that are knocked out Menin.

Staining Conditions

① SPiDER-βGal method

② X-gal method

*Data was kindly provided by Masakatsu Yamashita, at Ehime University Graduate School of Medicine

Experiment Example: Cellular Senescence with Metabolic shift

NAD(+) levels decline during the aging process, causing defects in nuclear and mitochondrial functions and resulting in many age-associated pathologies*. Here, we try to redemonstrate this phenomenon in the doxorubicin (DOX)-induced cellular senescence model with a comprehensive analysis of our products.

*S. Imai, et al., Trends Cell Biol, 2014, 24, 464-471

Related Products

 

Category Product Unit SKU

Cellular Metabolism

NAD/NADH Assay Kit-WST

100 tests

N509-10

Lactate Assay Kit-WST 50 / 200 tests L256-10 / L256-20
Glycolysis/OXPHOS Assay Kit NEW 50 tests G270-10

Cellular Senescence Detection

Cellular Senescence Detection Kit - SPiDER-βGal

1 / 3 / 10 plates

SG04-01 / SG04-03 / SG04-10

Mitochondrial Membrane Potential

JC-1 MitoMP Detection Kit

10 set

MT09-10

 

Association between cellular senescence and cell cycle

Doxorubicin (DOX) acts to inhibit cell proliferation during G2/M phases of the cell cycle and induces cellular senescence. After adding DOX to A549 cells, higher histogram peaks for the G2/M phase (Cell Cycle Assay Solution Blue and Deep Red), induces cellular senescence (Cellular Senescence Detection Kit - SPiDER-βGal), and the differences in mitochondrial membrane potential (JC-1 MitoMP Detection Kit) were observed.

Supplementary information on technology and products used

Quantification with confocal quantitative image cytometer

In the conventional method of X-gal, SA-β-gal-positive cells are counted under microscope and calculate the percent of the senescent cells by compared with total cells. The SA-β-gal-positive cells were stained with this kit and analyzed using confocal quantitative image cytometer CQ1(Yokogawa Electric Corporation).

The difference of SA-β-gal-positive cells ratio were shown in WI-38 cells depending on the number of passage. The data was quickly analysed with the confocal quantitative image cytometer compared with the manually counting procedure with X-gal staining method.

References

Open References

No. Sample Type Instrument Citation(Link)
1) Cell(HEK)
Gene(LacZ)
Microscopy
Flow Cytometry
T. Doura, M. Kamiya, F. Obata, Y. Yamaguchi, T. Y. Hiyama, T. Matsuda, A. Fukamizu, M. Noda, M. Miura, Y. Urano, "Detection of LacZ-Positive Cells in Living Tissue with Single-Cell Resolution."Angew Chem Int Ed Engl., 2016, 55, 33
2) Tissue
(Mouse Adipose Tissue)
Microscopy T. Sugizaki, S. Zhu, G. Guo, A. Matsumoto, J. Zhao, M. Endo, H. Horiguchi, J. Morinaga, Z. Tian, T. Kadomatsu, K. Miyata, H. Itoh & Y. Oike, "Treatment of diabetic mice with the SGLT2 inhibitor TA-1887 antagonizes diabetic cachexia and decreases mortality"Nature Partner Journal:Aging and Mechanisms of Disease., 2017, doi:10.1038/s41514-017-0012-0.
3) Cell
(HSP27-knockdown)

Protein 
(Ki67, cyclin B1)

Microscopy A. Park, I. Tsunoda and O. Yoshie, "Heat shock protein 27 promotes cell cycle progression by down-regulating E2F transcription factor 4 and retinoblastoma family protein p130"J. Biol. Chem.2018, doi: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.003310 .
4) Cell (A549) Microscopy
Flow Cytometry
R. Tanino, Y. Tsubata, N. Harashima, M. Harada and T. Isobe, "Novel drug-resistance mechanisms of pemetrexed-treated non-small cell lung cancer"Oncotarget., 2018, 9, (24), 16807.
5) Cell(NHDF) Microscopy Y. Kitahiro, A. Koike, A. Sonoki, M. Muto, K. Ozaki and M. Shibano. , "Anti-inflammatory activities of Ophiopogonis Radix on hydrogen peroxide-induced cellular senescence of normal human dermal fibroblasts."J Nat Med., 2018, 72, 905.
6) Tissue
(Aged Mouse Intestinal Epithelium Organoid) 
Microscopy R. Uchida, Y. Saito, K. Nogami, Y. Kajiyama, Y. Suzuki, Y. Kawase, T. Nakaoka, T. Muramatsu, M. Kimura and H. Saito, "Epigenetic silencing of Lgr5 induces senescence of intestinal epithelial organoids during the process of aging"NPJ Aging Mech Dis., 2018, doi:10.1038/s41514-018-0031-5.
7) Tissue
(Frozen Kidney Slide)
Microscopy S. R. Kim, A. Eirin, X. Zhang, A. Lerman and L. O. Lerman, "Mitochondrial Protection Partly Mitigates Kidney Cellular Senescence in Swine Atherosclerotic Renal Artery Stenosis."Cell. Physiol. Biochem., 2019, 52, 617.
8) Cell(HN6, HN12, HN13) Flow Cytometry Liana P. Webber, Veronica Q. Yujra, Pablo A. Vargas, Manoela D. Martins. Cristiane H. Squarize, Rogerio M. Castilho, "Interference with the bromodomain epigenome readers drives p21 expression and tumor senescence"Cancer Letters., 2019, doi.org/10.1016/j.canlet.2019.06.019.
9) Cell(UE7T-13) Flow Cytometry H. Ise, K. Matsunaga, M. Shinohara and Y. Sakai, Improved Isolation of Mesenchymal Stem Cells Based on Interactions between N-Acetylglucosamine-Bearing Polymers and Cell-Surface Vimentin "Stem Cells Int., 2019, 4341286, 13.
10) Cell(Mouse Corneal stroma) Flow Cytometry X. Wang, M. Qu, J. Li, P. Danielson, L. Yang and Q. Zhou, Induction of Fibroblast Senescence During Mouse Corneal Wound Healing."Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., 2019, 60, (10), 3669.
11) Cell(VZ/SVZ) Flow Cytometry  Y. Nakatani, H. Kiyonari and T. Kondo, Ecrg4 deficiency extends the replicative capacity of neural stem cells in a Foxg1-dependent manner."Development., 2019, 146, (4), 18.
12) Cell(HaCaT, HEK001) Microscopy Y. S. Ryu, K. A. Kang, M. J. Piao, M. J. Ahn, J. M. Yi, G. Bossis, Y. M. Hyun, C. O. Park and J. W. Hyun, Particulate matter-induced senescence of skin keratinocytes involves oxidative stress-dependent epigenetic modifications"Exp. Mol. Med., 2019, 51, 108.
13) Cell(HT1080) Microscopy E. M. Angela Ibler, E. Mohamed, L. N. Kathryn, A. B. Natalia, F. E. K. Sherif and H. Daniel, Typhoid toxin exhausts the RPA response to DNA replication stress driving senescence and Salmonella infection'Nat Commun., 2019, 10, 4040.
14) - (Review) Flow Cytometry  B.L. Torres, A. Estepa-Fernandez, M. Rovira, M. Oraez, M. Serrano, R. Martinez-Manez and F. Sancenon,"The chemistry of senescence."The chemistry of senescence., 2019, (3), 426-411
15) Cell(PC12) Microscopy N. Wang, H. Wang, L. Li, Y. Li and R. Zhang, "β-Asarone Inhibits Amyloid-β by Promoting Autophagy in a Cell Model of Alzheimer's Disease."Front Pharmacol., 2020, 10, 1529
16) Cell(A2780) Flow Cytometry Z. Wang, J. Gao, Y. Ohno, H. Liu and C. Xu, "Rosiglitazone ameliorates senescence and promotes apoptosis in ovarian cancer induced by olaparib."Cancer Chemother Pharmacol., 2020.
17) Tissue
(Mouse Frozen Kidney Slide)
Microscopy
 Flow Cytometry
J. H. Cho, E. Kim, Y. Son, D. Lee, Y. S. Park, J. H. Choi, K. Cho, K. Kwon and J. Kim, "CD9 Induces Cellular Senescence and Aggravates Atherosclerotic Plaque Formation."Cell Death Differ.2020, doi: 10.1038/s41418-020-0537-9
18) Cell(T cell) Flow Cytometry S. Yoshida, H. Nakagami, H. Hayashi, Y. Ikeda, J. Sun, A. Tenma, H. Tomioka, T. Kaawano, M. Shimamura, R. Morishita and H. Rakugi, "The CD153 vaccine is a senotherapeutic option for preventing the accumulation of senescent T cells in mice."Nat. Commun., 2020, 11, (2482), doi:10.1038/s41467-020-16347-w
19) Cell(PC12) Microscopy N. Wang, H. Wang, L. Li, Y. Li and R. Zhang, "β-Asarone Inhibits Amyloid-β by Promoting Autophagy in a Cell Model of Alzheimer's Disease."Front Pharmacol., 2020, 10, 1529
20) Cell(ARPE-19) Microscopy T. Yamazaki, H. Suzuki, S. Yamada, K. Ohshio, M. Sugamata, T. Yamada and Y. Morita, "Lactobacillus paracasei KW3110 Suppresses Inflammatory Stress-Induced Premature Cellular Senescence of Human Retinal Pigment Epithelium Cells and Reduces Ocular Disorders in Healthy Humans”, Int J Mol Sci, 2020, 21(14), 5091
21) Cell
(Epithelial cells of zebrafish)
Microscopy Y. Haraoka, Y. Akieda, Y. Nagai, C. Mogi and T. Ishitani, "Zebrafish imaging reveals TP53 mutation switching oncogene-induced senescence from suppressor to driver in primary tumorigenesis"Nat. Commun.2022, doi:10.1038/s41467-022-29061-6.
22) Tissue (Adipose) Microscopy A. Kita, Y. Saito, N. Miura, M. Miyajima, S. Yamamoto, T. Sato, T. Yotsuyanagi, M. Fujimiya and T. Chikenji, "Altered regulation of mesenchymal cell senescence in adipose tissue promotes pathological changes associated with diabetic wound healing"Commun. Biol.2022, doi:10.1038/s42003-022-03266-3.
23) Cell (hMPC) Microscopy X. Liu, Z. Liu, Z. Wu, J. Ren, Y. Fan, L. Sun, G. Cao, Y. Niu, B. Zhang, Q. Ji, X Jiang, C. Wang, Q. Wang, Z. Ji, L. Li, C. R. Esteban, K. Yan, W. Li, Y. Cai, S. Wang, A. Zheng, Y. E. Zhang, S. Tan, Y. Cai, M. Song, F. Lu, F. Tang, W. Ji, Q. Zhou, J. Belmonte, W. Zhang, J. Qu, G. Liu, "Resurrection of endogenous retroviruses during aging reinforces senescence"Cell2023, doi:10.1016/j.cell.2022.12.017.

Q & A

Q

Are there any advices when observing the senescent cells?

A

Lipofuscin is a fluorescent pigment that accumulates in a variety of cell types with age. Lipofuscin consists of autofluorescent granules and may results in high background for fluorescence microscopy. In order to achieve accurate SA-β-gal activity assay in senescent cells, we recommend to prepare samples without SPiDER-βGal staining. Please compare fluorescence intensity of both cells with or without SPiDER-βGal staining.

 

> For Flow Cytometry Detection

Step 1. Prepare senescent cells and non-senescent cells. Measure MFI (Mean Fluorescence Intensity) of samples below.

[Senescent cells]

Sample A: The cells stained with SPiDER-βGal

Sample B: The cells without SPiDER-βGal staining

[Non-senescent cells]

Sample A’: The cells stained with SPiDER-βGal

Sample B’: The cells without SPiDER-βGal staining

 

Step 2. Calculate SA-β-gal activity (senescent cells) with the following formula

SA-β-gal activity (senescent cells) = MFI of Sample A - MFI of Sample B

 

Step 3. Calculate SA-β-gal activity (non-senescent cells) with the following formula

SA-β-gal activity (non-senescent cells) = MFI of Sample A’ - MFI of Sample B’

  • Determine the SA-β-gal activity by comparing the SA-β-gal activity between senescent cells and non-senescent cells.
  • Change of SA-β-gal activity associated with senescence = (Value from Step 2- value from Step 3)

 

>For Microscopy

Step 1. Prepare senescent cells without SPiDER-βGal staining and observe fluorescent image.

Step 2. Adjust detection sensitivity in microscopy to reduce background autofluorescence of lipofuscin.

Step 3. Observe fluorescent image of senescent cells and non-senescent cells under the settled condition in step 2.

Q

Background in control cells

A

Reagents were not prepared correctly. Check that the reagents were stored correctly. SPiDER-βGal DMSO stock solution and Bafilomycin A1 DMSO stock solution is stable for 1 month at -20 ℃. SPiDER-βGal working solution and Bafilomycin A1 working solution can’t be stored. Be sure to use the working solution immediately.

Q

Background in senescent cells without adding SPiDER-βGal working solution

A

Lipofuscin, which consists of autofluorescent granules, accumulated in the senescent cells. In order to achieve accurate SA-β-gal activity assay in senescent cells, we recommend to prepare samples without SPiDER-βGal staining. Please compare fluorescence intensity of both cells with / without SPiDER-βGal staining. For Microscopy or Flow Cytometry.

Please visit product page and check “FAQ”

Q

Background in fix cells assay

A

The incubation with SPiDER-βGal working solution was done in a 5% CO2 incubator. We recommend not to use a 5% CO2 incubator during incubation with SPiDER-βGal working solution. If incubation is done in a 5% CO2 incubator, the pH of the buffer may become acidic. Acidic pH results in higher background from the endogenous β-galactosidase activity and it would be difficult to distinguish between control cells and senescent cells. Please incubate the plate in a dry incubator without CO2 .

Q

No difference in fluorescence intensity between senescent cells and control cells

A

Cellular senescence wasn’t induced. Please prepare for positive control. Please visit product page and check “Positive Control”

Q

Low fluorescence reading

A

Incubation time with SPiDER-βGal working solution was short. Optimize the incubation time (~ 60 min). Concentration of SPiDER-βGal working solution was low. Optimize the concentration (~2 times the concentration described in the technical manual).

Handling and storage condition

Handling and storage condition
0-5°C
Contact
Price

Product Classification

Product Classification

Search word