| Literature DB >> 24596048 |
Amy C Degnim1, Rushin D Brahmbhatt, Derek C Radisky, Tanya L Hoskin, Melody Stallings-Mann, Mark Laudenschlager, Aaron Mansfield, Marlene H Frost, Linda Murphy, Keith Knutson, Daniel W Visscher.
Abstract
While the immune microenvironment has been investigated in breast cancers, little is known about its role in non-malignant breast tissues. Here we quantify and localize cellular immune components in normal breast tissue lobules, with and without visible immune infiltrates (lobulitis). Up to ten representative lobules each in eleven normal breast tissue samples were assessed for B cells (CD20), cytotoxic T cells (CD8), helper T cells (CD4), dendritic cells (CD11c), leukocytes (CD45), and monocytes/macrophages (CD68). Using digital image analysis, immune cell densities were measured and compared between lobules with/without lobulitis. 109 lobules in 11 normal breast tissue samples were evaluated; 31 with lobulitis and 78 without. Immune cells showed consistent patterns in all normal samples, predominantly localized to lobules rather than stroma. Regardless of lobulitis status, most lobules demonstrated CD8+, CD11c+, CD45+, and CD68+ cells, with lower densities of CD4+ and CD20+ cells. Both CD11c+ and CD8+ cells were consistently and intimately associated with the basal aspect of lobule epithelium. Significantly higher densities of CD4+, CD8+, CD20+, and CD45+ cells were observed in lobules with lobulitis. In contrast, densities of monocytes/macrophages and dendritic cells did not vary with lobulitis. In normal breast tissue, myeloid and lymphoid cells are present and localized to lobules, with cytotoxic T and dendritic cells directly integrated with epithelium. Lobules with lobulitis have significantly more adaptive immune (B and T) cells, but no increase in dendritic cells or monocytes/macrophages. These findings indicate an active and dynamic mucosal immune system in normal breast tissue.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24596048 PMCID: PMC3962744 DOI: 10.1007/s10549-014-2896-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 0167-6806 Impact factor: 4.872
Fig. 1The presence of immune infiltrates that define lobulitis. a Normal lobule, without lobulitis; b normal lobule, with lobulitis. H&E stain, ×200 magnification
Fig. 2Quantification of immune cells in normal lobules. a, b CD8+ cell quantitation in a normal lobule without lobulitis. a immunostain alone, b color overlay demonstrating positively stained cells within circled lobule; positive cells are identified by red and orange color, yellow cells are below staining threshold for positivity, and blue cells are non-staining cells. c, d CD11c quantitation by pixel count ratio in a normal lobule without lobulitis, ×200 magnification. c Immunostain alone, d color overlay demonstrating pixels with positive staining (red and orange) compared to non-stained pixels (blue). ×200 magnification
Fig. 3Quantitative immune cell densities for individual lobules in each of the 11 subjects studied; open circles indicate lobules without lobulitis, and crosses indicate lobules with lobulitis. Asterisk in CD8 density plot denotes one point outside the plotting region for subject #10 (value was 1336 CD8 cells/mm2)
Density of immune cells in normal breast tissues and benign positive controls
| Cell type | Normal samples (11 subjects) | Positive controls (2 subjects) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lobules with lobulitis | Lobules without lobulitis | Age-adjusted | Resolving lactation | Diabetic mastopathy | |||||
| Median | (IQR) | Median | (IQR) | Median | (IQR) | Median | (IQR) | ||
| CD4 (cells/mm2) | 61.9 | (25.0, 80.2) | 27.3 | (0, 101.2) | 0.0001 | 185 | (120, 1,057) | 750 | (160, 2,336) |
| CD8 (cells/mm2) | 381.5 | (307.2, 567.7) | 216.3 | (145.8, 303.0) | <0.0001 | 395 | (177, 697) | 465 | (196, 551) |
| CD20 (cells/mm2) | 20.0 | (3.8, 151.2) | 0 | (0, 19.1) | 0.003 | 60 | (33, 262) | 2,510 | (269, 3,664) |
| CD45 (cells/mm2) | 261.3 | (169.4, 351.2) | 122.9 | (81.4, 179.9) | <0.0001 | 615 | (511, 1,762) | 3,872 | (1,171, 4,719) |
| CD68 (cells/mm2) | 210.1 | (103.1, 268.3) | 192.8 | (113.1, 263.8) | 0.41 | 1,822 | (1,412, 2,100) | 2,003 | (1,573, 2,308) |
| CD11c pixel ratio (positive/total) | 0.03 | (0.02, 0.04) | 0.02 | (0.01, 0.04) | 0.11 | 0.20 | (0.14, 0.29) | 0.19 | (0.14, 0.27) |
Number and percentage of lobules with a value of 0 for various immune cell types
| Cell type | All lobules | Lobules without lobulitis | Lobules with lobulitis | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | % | N | % | N | % | |
| CD4 | 24 | 22.0 | 23 | 29.5 | 1 | 3.2 |
| CD8 | 1 | 0.9 | 1 | 1.3 | 0 | 0 |
| CD20 | 54 | 49.5 | 47 | 60.3 | 7 | 22.6 |
| CD45 | 3 | 2.8 | 3 | 3.8 | 0 | 0 |
| CD68 | 5 | 4.6 | 5 | 6.4 | 0 | 0 |
| CD11c | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Fig. 4Direct association of dendritic cells and CD8 T cells within epithelium. a CD8 positive cells located at the basal aspect of the epithelium, b CD11c positive staining extending more diffusely around epithelium. ×400 magnification
Variation in immune cell densities between and within subjects
| Cell type | Between-subject variance | Within-subject variance | ICC | CV median (range) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD4 (cells/mm2) | 3,001.17 | 4,440.53 | 0.403 | 84 % (40–139 %) |
| CD8 (cells/mm2) | 17,468.78 | 26,572.44 | 0.397 | 51 % (15–78 %) |
| CD20 (cells/mm2) | 3,736.08 | 3,517.39 | 0.515 | 182 % (65–316 %) |
| CD45 (cells/mm2) | 2,696.35 | 11,552.14 | 0.189 | 65 % (37–83 %) |
| CD68 (cells/mm2) | 3,252.43 | 10,558.04 | 0.236 | 42 % (21–116 %) |
| CD11c pixel ratio (positive/total) | 0.0001179 | 0.0001736 | 0.404 | 43 % (18–76 %) |
Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) is the ratio of the between-subject variance to the total variance (i.e., the proportion of the total variance representing between-subject variance); values >0.50 would indicate that the variance between subjects was greater than the variance within subjects while values <0.50 would indicate that the variance between subjects was less than the variance within subjects
Coefficient of variation (CV) is the ratio of the standard deviation divided by the mean. Within-sample CVs were calculated and then summarized over all samples