# A new method for detecting mycoplasma in cell cultures using colocalization of DNA and membrane staining

**Authors:** Mengyuan Li, Shan Liu, Cheng Zhou, Mengsi Sun, Yanjie Wang

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrep.2025.102133 · Biochemistry and Biophysics Reports · 2025-07-03

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a new method to detect mycoplasma contamination in cell cultures by using DNA and membrane staining together, improving accuracy over traditional methods.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is a colocalization-based detection method that reduces false positives from cytoplasmic DNA.

## Key findings

- Colocalization of DNA and membrane staining improves mycoplasma detection accuracy.
- Cytoplasmic DNA interference is effectively mitigated using this method.
- The approach enables rapid and reliable identification of mycoplasma contamination.

## Abstract

Mycoplasma often surreptitiously contaminates cell cultures without detection, mainly parasitizing the cell surface and thus interfering to some extent with the cells. Direct DNA staining of cell cultures often yields equivocal results and will only reliably detect heavily contaminated cultures. Interpretation is difficult in cases where degraded DNA from host cells may produce small spots of fluorescence under microscopy that mimic mycoplasma. To quickly and directly screen for mycoplasma contamination, we stained cells that were either contaminated with mycoplasma or treated with antibiotics using a combination of DNA and cell membrane fluorescent dyes. The contamination of mycoplasma could be accurately assessed by determining its colocalization with the surface of the plasma membrane. This approach minimized interference from cytoplasmic DNA components and greatly improved the accuracy of using DNA staining alone for mycoplasma detection. This study aimed to develop a colocalization method for the rapid detection of mycoplasma in culture samples, facilitating early diagnosis and treatment. It could serve as a valuable tool for the swift identification of contamination in cell cultures.

Image 1

•Cellular DNA interferes with the results of mycoplasma elimination when using DNA staining alone.•WGA and Hoechst co-localize on the host cell membrane to identify contamination.•False positive results caused by cytoplasmic DNA can be effectively mitigated.

Cellular DNA interferes with the results of mycoplasma elimination when using DNA staining alone.

WGA and Hoechst co-localize on the host cell membrane to identify contamination.

False positive results caused by cytoplasmic DNA can be effectively mitigated.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** mycoplasma (MESH:D009175)
- **Species:** Mycoplasma (genus) [taxon 2093]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12270630/full.md

## References

13 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12270630/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12270630