Cell viability and cytotoxicity assays: Biochemical elements and
cellular compartments
Abstract
Cell viability and cytotoxicity assays play a crucial role in drug
screening and evaluating the cytotoxic effects of various chemicals. The
quantification of cell viability and proliferation serves as the
cornerstone for numerous in vitro assays that assess cellular responses
to external factors. In the last decade, several studies have developed
guidelines for defining and interpreting cell viability and cytotoxicity
based on morphological, biochemical, and functional perspectives. As
this domain continues to experience ongoing growth, revealing new
mechanisms orchestrating diverse cell cytotoxicity pathways, we suggest
a revised classification for multiple assays employed in evaluating cell
viability and cell death. This classification is rooted in the cellular
compartment and/or biochemical element involved, with a specific focus
on mechanistic and essential aspects of the process. The assays are
founded on diverse cell functions, encompassing metabolic activity,
enzyme activity, cell membrane permeability and integrity, ATP content,
cell adherence, reduction equivalents, dye inclusion or exclusion,
constitutive protease activity, colony formation, DNA fragmentation and
nuclear splitting. These assays present straightforward, reliable,
sensitive, reproducible, cost-effective, and high-throughput approaches
for appraising the effects of newly formulated chemotherapeutic
biomolecules on the cell survival during the drug development process.