| Literature DB >> 27349970 |
Péter Engelmann1, Yuya Hayashi2, Kornélia Bodó3, Dávid Ernszt4, Ildikó Somogyi5, Anita Steib5, József Orbán6, Edit Pollák5, Miklós Nyitrai7, Péter Németh3, László Molnár5.
Abstract
Flow cytometry is a common approach to study invertebrate immune cells including earthworm coelomocytes. However, the link between light-scatter- and microscopy-based phenotyping remains obscured. Here we show, by means of light scatter-based cell sorting, both subpopulations (amoebocytes and eleocytes) can be physically isolated with good sort efficiency and purity confirmed by downstream morphological and cytochemical applications. Immunocytochemical analysis using anti-EFCC monoclonal antibodies combined with phalloidin staining has revealed antigenically distinct, sorted subsets. Screening of lectin binding capacity indicated wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) as the strongest reactor to amoebocytes. This is further evidenced by WGA inhibition assays that suggest high abundance of N-acetyl-d-glucosamine in amoebocytes. Post-sort phagocytosis assays confirmed the functional differences between amoebocytes and eleocytes, with the former being in favor of bacterial engulfment. This study has proved successful in linking flow cytometry and microscopy analysis and provides further experimental evidence of phenotypic and functional heterogeneity in earthworm coelomocyte subsets.Entities:
Keywords: Cytochemistry; FACS; Lectin binding; Monoclonal antibody; Phagocytosis
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27349970 DOI: 10.1016/j.dci.2016.06.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Comp Immunol ISSN: 0145-305X Impact factor: 3.636