| Literature DB >> 20104580 |
Devon J Shedlock1, Kendra T Talbott, Matthew P Morrow, Bernadette Ferraro, David A Hokey, Karuppiah Muthumani, David B Weiner.
Abstract
The capacity for robust proliferation upon re-infection is a hallmark of adaptive immunity and the basis of vaccination. A widely used animal model for the study of human disease is the rhesus macaque (RM), where capacity for proliferation can be assessed ex vivo using carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester (CFSE)-based dilution assays. However, we show over the course of the standard ex vivo proliferation assay that CFSE-labeling at commonly used dye concentrations induces significant cell death, but that this phenomenon is dose-dependent. Here, we describe an alternative semiquantitative method for estimating T cell proliferative responses that avoids the putative biases associated with chemical modification. RM peripheral blood mononuclear cells were stimulated ex vivo with cognate peptides for 5 days, immunostained for intracellular Ki-67, and then analyzed by flow cytometry. We describe a gating strategy using Ki-67 and side light scatter, also a marker of blastogenesis, which correlates strongly with data from CFSE dilution. We show that this method is a valid tool for measuring RM antigen-specific cellular proliferation ex vivo and can be used as an alternative to CFSE dilution assays. (c) 2010 International Society for Advancement of Cytometry.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20104580 PMCID: PMC2939446 DOI: 10.1002/cyto.a.20857
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytometry A ISSN: 1552-4922 Impact factor: 4.355