| Literature DB >> 26160952 |
Matthew H Spitzer1, Pier Federico Gherardini2, Gabriela K Fragiadakis2, Nupur Bhattacharya3, Robert T Yuan4, Andrew N Hotson2, Rachel Finck2, Yaron Carmi3, Eli R Zunder2, Wendy J Fantl5, Sean C Bendall4, Edgar G Engleman4, Garry P Nolan6.
Abstract
Immune cells function in an interacting hierarchy that coordinates the activities of various cell types according to genetic and environmental contexts. We developed graphical approaches to construct an extensible immune reference map from mass cytometry data of cells from different organs, incorporating landmark cell populations as flags on the map to compare cells from distinct samples. The maps recapitulated canonical cellular phenotypes and revealed reproducible, tissue-specific deviations. The approach revealed influences of genetic variation and circadian rhythms on immune system structure, enabled direct comparisons of murine and human blood cell phenotypes, and even enabled archival fluorescence-based flow cytometry data to be mapped onto the reference framework. This foundational reference map provides a working definition of systemic immune organization to which new data can be integrated to reveal deviations driven by genetics, environment, or pathology.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26160952 PMCID: PMC4537647 DOI: 10.1126/science.1259425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728