Hamot G et al. (JUN 2015)
Biopreservation and biobanking 13 3 152--63
Method validation for automated isolation of viable peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
BACKGROUND This article is part of a series of publications providing formal method validation for biospecimen processing in the context of accreditation in laboratories and biobanks. We report the optimization and validation for fitness-for-purpose of automated and manual protocols for isolating peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from whole blood,and compare the two methods. METHODS The manual method was optimized for whole blood centrifugation speed,gradient type (Ficoll,Leucosep,CPT),and freezing method (Mr Frosty,Controlled Rate Freezing). Various parameters of the automated protocol using a CPT gradient on a Tecan liquid handler were optimized. Optimal protocols were validated in parallel for reproducibility and robustness. Optimization and validation were assessed in terms of cell yield,viability,recovery,white blood cell (WBC) subpopulation distribution,gene expression,and lymphoblastoid cell line (LCL) transformation. RESULTS An initial centrifugation of whole blood at 2000 g was considered optimal for further processing,allowing isolation of plasma and PBMCs from a single sample. The three gradients gave similar outcomes in terms of cell yield,viability,and WBC subpopulation distribution. Ficoll showed some advantages and was selected for further evaluations. Optimization of the automated protocol script using a CPT gradient gave 61% cell recovery. No significant differences in quality,quantity,and WBC subpopulation distribution were seen between the two freezing methods,and Mr. Frosty was selected. The manual and automated protocols were reproducible in terms of quantity,recovery,viability,WBC subpopulation distribution,gene expression,and LCL transformation. Most (75%-100%) of the 13 robustness parameters were accepted for both methods with an 8 h pre-centrifugation delay versus 38%-85% after 24 h. Differences identified between the automated and manual methods were not considered consequential. CONCLUSIONS We validated the first fully automated method for isolating viable PBMCs,including RNA analysis and generation of LCLs. We recommend processing within 8 h of blood collection.
View Publication
产品类型:
产品号#:
07930
07931
07940
07952
07955
07959
100-1061
产品名:
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
Tyznik AJ et al. ( 2014)
The Journal of Immunology 192 8 3676--85
Distinct requirements for activation of NKT and NK cells during viral infection
NK cells are key regulators of innate defense against mouse CMV (MCMV). Like NK cells,NKT cells also produce high levels of IFN-γ rapidly after MCMV infection. However,whether similar mechanisms govern activation of these two cell types,as well as the significance of NKT cells for host resistance,remain unknown. In this article,we show that,although both NKT and NK cells are activated via cytokines,their particular cytokine requirements differ significantly in vitro and in vivo. IL-12 is required for NKT cell activation in vitro but is not sufficient,whereas NK cells have the capacity to be activated more promiscuously in response to individual cytokines from innate cells. In line with these results,GM-CSF-derived dendritic cells activated only NK cells upon MCMV infection,consistent with their virtual lack of IL-12 production,whereas Flt3 ligand-derived dendritic cells produced IL-12 and activated both NK and NKT cells. In vivo,NKT cell activation was abolished in IL-12(-/-) mice infected with MCMV,whereas NK cells were still activated. In turn,splenic NK cell activation was more IL-18 dependent. The differential requirements for IL-12 and IL-18 correlated with the levels of cytokine receptor expression by NK and NKT cells. Finally,mice lacking NKT cells showed reduced control of MCMV,and depleting NK cells further enhanced viral replication. Taken together,our results show that NKT and NK cells have differing requirements for cytokine-mediated activation,and both can contribute nonredundantly to MCMV defense,revealing that these two innate lymphocyte subsets function together to fine-tune antiviral responses.
View Publication
Apolipoprotein-mediated lipid antigen presentation in B cells provides a pathway for innate help by NKT cells.
Natural killer T (NKT) cells are innate-like lymphocytes that recognize lipid antigens and have been shown to enhance B-cell activation and antibody production. B cells typically recruit T-cell help by presenting internalized antigens recognized by their surface antigen receptor. Here,we demonstrate a highly efficient means whereby human B cells present lipid antigens to NKT cells,capturing the antigen using apolipoprotein E (apoE) and the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDL-R). ApoE dramatically enhances B-cell presentation of alpha-galactosylceramide (alphaGalCer),an exogenous CD1d presented antigen,inducing activation of NKT cells and the subsequent activation of B cells. B cells express the LDL-R on activation,and the activation of NKT cells by B cells is completely LDL-R dependent,as shown by blocking experiments and the complete lack of presentation when using apoE2,an isoform of apoE incapable of LDL-R binding. The dependence on apoE and the LDL-R is much more pronounced in B cells than we had previously seen in dendritic cells,which can apparently use alternate pathways of lipid antigen uptake. Thus,B cells use an apolipoprotein-mediated pathway of lipid antigen presentation,which constitutes a form of innate help for B cells by NKT cells.
View Publication
C. Onyilagha et al. (jun 2019)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950)
NK Cells Are Critical for Optimal Immunity to Experimental Trypanosoma congolense Infection.
NK cells are key innate immune cells that play critical roles in host defense. Although NK cells have been shown to regulate immunity to some infectious diseases,their role in immunity to Trypanosoma congolense has not been investigated. NK cells are vital sources of IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha; two key cytokines that are known to play important roles in resistance to African trypanosomes. In this article,we show that infection with T. congolense leads to increased levels of activated and functional NK cells in multiple tissue compartments. Systemic depletion of NK cells with anti-NK1.1 mAb led to increased parasitemia,which was accompanied by significant reduction in IFN-gamma production by immune cells in the spleens and liver of infected mice. Strikingly,infected NFIL3-/- mice (which genetically lack NK cell development and function) on the normally resistant background were highly susceptible to T. congolense infection. These mice developed fulminating and uncontrolled parasitemia and died significantly earlier (13 ± 1 d) than their wild-type control mice (106 ± 26 d). The enhanced susceptibility of NFIL3-/- mice to infection was accompanied by significantly impaired cytokine (IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha) response by CD3+ T cells in the spleens and liver. Adoptive transfer of NK cells into NFIL3-/- mice before infection rescued them from acute death in a perforin-dependent manner. Collectively,these studies show that NK cells are critical for optimal resistance to T. congolense,and its deficiency leads to enhanced susceptibility in infected mice.
View Publication
产品类型:
产品号#:
19855
19855RF
产品名:
EasySep™小鼠NK细胞分选试剂盒
RoboSep™ 小鼠NK细胞分选试剂盒
Christopher MJ et al. (FEB 2011)
The Journal of experimental medicine 208 2 251--60
Expression of the G-CSF receptor in monocytic cells is sufficient to mediate hematopoietic progenitor mobilization by G-CSF in mice.
Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF),the prototypical mobilizing cytokine,induces hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) mobilization from the bone marrow in a cell-nonautonomous fashion. This process is mediated,in part,through suppression of osteoblasts and disruption of CXCR4/CXCL12 signaling. The cellular targets of G-CSF that initiate the mobilization cascade have not been identified. We use mixed G-CSF receptor (G-CSFR)-deficient bone marrow chimeras to show that G-CSF-induced mobilization of HSPCs correlates poorly with the number of wild-type neutrophils. We generated transgenic mice in which expression of the G-CSFR is restricted to cells of the monocytic lineage. G-CSF-induced HSPC mobilization,osteoblast suppression,and inhibition of CXCL12 expression in the bone marrow of these transgenic mice are intact,demonstrating that G-CSFR signals in monocytic cells are sufficient to induce HSPC mobilization. Moreover,G-CSF treatment of wild-type mice is associated with marked loss of monocytic cells in the bone marrow. Finally,we show that bone marrow macrophages produce factors that support the growth and/or survival of osteoblasts in vitro. Together,these data suggest a model in which G-CSFR signals in bone marrow monocytic cells inhibit the production of trophic factors required for osteoblast lineage cell maintenance,ultimately leading to HSPC mobilization.
View Publication
产品类型:
产品号#:
03434
03444
产品名:
MethoCult™GF M3434
MethoCult™GF M3434
Putnam AL et al. (NOV 2013)
American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons 13 11 3010--20
Clinical grade manufacturing of human alloantigen-reactive regulatory T cells for use in transplantation.
Regulatory T cell (Treg) therapy has the potential to induce transplantation tolerance so that immunosuppression and associated morbidity can be minimized. Alloantigen-reactive Tregs (arTregs) are more effective at preventing graft rejection than polyclonally expanded Tregs (PolyTregs) in murine models. We have developed a manufacturing process to expand human arTregs in short-term cultures using good manufacturing practice-compliant reagents. This process uses CD40L-activated allogeneic B cells to selectively expand arTregs followed by polyclonal restimulation to increase yield. Tregs expanded 100- to 1600-fold were highly alloantigen reactive and expressed the phenotype of stable Tregs. The alloantigen-expanded Tregs had a diverse TCR repertoire. They were more potent than PolyTregs in vitro and more effective at controlling allograft injuries in vivo in a humanized mouse model.
View Publication
产品类型:
产品号#:
07930
07931
07940
07952
07955
07959
100-1061
产品名:
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
CryoStor® CS10
Ingersoll MA et al. (JAN 2010)
Blood 115 3 e10--9
Comparison of gene expression profiles between human and mouse monocyte subsets.
Blood of both humans and mice contains 2 main monocyte subsets. Here,we investigated the extent of their similarity using a microarray approach. Approximately 270 genes in humans and 550 genes in mice were differentially expressed between subsets by 2-fold or more. More than 130 of these gene expression differences were conserved between mouse and human monocyte subsets. We confirmed numerous of these differences at the cell surface protein level. Despite overall conservation,some molecules were conversely expressed between the 2 species' subsets,including CD36,CD9,and TREM-1. Other differences included a prominent peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma) signature in mouse monocytes,which is absent in humans,and strikingly opposed patterns of receptors involved in uptake of apoptotic cells and other phagocytic cargo between human and mouse monocyte subsets. Thus,whereas human and mouse monocyte subsets are far more broadly conserved than currently recognized,important differences between the species deserve consideration when models of human disease are studied in mice.
View Publication
Y. Kuwano et al. (MAY 2016)
Journal of Immunology 196 9 3828--33
G$\alpha$i2 and G$\alpha$i3 Differentially Regulate Arrest from Flow and Chemotaxis in Mouse Neutrophils.
Leukocyte recruitment to inflammation sites progresses in a multistep cascade. Chemokines regulate multiple steps of the cascade,including arrest,transmigration,and chemotaxis. The most important chemokine receptor in mouse neutrophils is CXCR2,which couples through G$\alpha$i2- and G$\alpha$i3-containing heterotrimeric G proteins. Neutrophils arrest in response to CXCR2 stimulation. This is defective in G$\alpha$i2-deficient neutrophils. In this study,we show that G$\alpha$i3-deficient neutrophils showed reduced transmigration but normal arrest in mice. We also tested G$\alpha$i2- or G$\alpha$i3-deficient neutrophils in a CXCL1 gradient generated by a microfluidic device. G$\alpha$i3-,but not G$\alpha$i2-,deficient neutrophils showed significantly reduced migration and directionality. This was confirmed in a model of sterile inflammation in vivo. G$\alpha$i2-,but not G$\alpha$i3-,deficient neutrophils showed decreased Ca(2+) flux in response to CXCR2 stimulation. Conversely,G$\alpha$i3-,but not G$\alpha$i2-,deficient neutrophils exhibited reduced AKT phosphorylation upon CXCR2 stimulation. We conclude that G$\alpha$i2 controls arrest and G$\alpha$i3 controls transmigration and chemotaxis in response to chemokine stimulation of neutrophils.
View Publication
产品类型:
产品号#:
19762
19762RF
20155
产品名:
EasySep™小鼠中性粒细胞富集试剂盒
RoboSep™ 小鼠中性粒细胞富集试剂盒含滤芯吸头
RoboSep™分选试管套装(9个塑料管+吸头保护器)
A. Reuter et al. ( 2015)
The Journal of Immunology 194 2696-2705
Criteria for Dendritic Cell Receptor Selection for Efficient Antibody-Targeted Vaccination
Ab-targeted vaccination involves targeting a receptor of choice expressed by dendritic cells (DCs) with Ag-coupled Abs. Currently,there is little consensus as to which criteria determine receptor selection to ensure superior Ag presentation and immunity. In this study,we investigated parameters of DC receptor internalization and determined how they impact Ag presentation outcomes. First,using mixed bone marrow chimeras,we established that Ag-targeted,but not nontargeted,DCs are responsible for Ag presentation in settings of Ab-targeted vaccination in vivo. Next,we analyzed parameters of DEC205 (CD205),Clec9A,CD11c,CD11b,and CD40 endocytosis and obtained quantitative measurements of internalization speed,surface turnover,and delivered Ag load. Exploiting these parameters in MHC class I (MHC I) and MHC class II (MHC II) Ag presentation assays,we showed that receptor expression level,proportion of surface turnover,or speed of receptor internalization did not impact MHC I or MHC II Ag presentation efficiency. Furthermore,the Ag load delivered to DCs did not correlate with the efficiency of MHC I or MHC II Ag presentation. In contrast,targeting Ag to CD8(+) or CD8(-) DCs enhanced MHC I or MHC II Ag presentation,respectively. Therefore,receptor expression levels,speed of internalization,and/or the amount of Ag delivered can be excluded as major determinants that dictate Ag presentation efficiency in setting of Ab-targeted vaccination.
View Publication