Drugs with anti-oxidant properties can interfere with cell viability measurements by assays that rely on the reducing property of viable cells

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Abstract

Cell viability assays such as Cell Titer Blue and Alamar Blue rely on the reducing property of viable cells to reduce the reagent dye to a product which gives a fluorescent signal. The current manufacture-recommended protocols do not take into account the possibility of the reagent substrate being reduced directly to the fluorescent product by drugs with an anti-oxidant property. After suspecting spurious results while determining the cytotoxic potential of a drug of interest (DOI) with known anti-oxidant property against a renal cell cancer (RCC) cell line, we aimed to establish that drugs with anti-oxidant property can indeed cause false-negative results with the current protocols of these assays by direct reduction of the reagent substrate. We also aimed to counter the same with a simple modification added to the protocol. Through our experiments, we conclusively demonstrate that drugs with anti-oxidant properties can indeed interfere with cell viability measurements by assays that rely on the reducing property of viable cells. A simple modification in the protocol, as elaborated in the manuscript, can prevent spurious results with these otherwise convenient assays.

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APA

Shenoy, N., Stenson, M., Lawson, J., Abeykoon, J., Patnaik, M., Wu, X., & Witzig, T. (2017). Drugs with anti-oxidant properties can interfere with cell viability measurements by assays that rely on the reducing property of viable cells. Laboratory Investigation, 97(5), 494–497. https://doi.org/10.1038/labinvest.2017.18

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