| Literature DB >> 27834938 |
E Spanoudakis1, M Papoutselis1, E Terpos2, M A Dimopoulos2, C Tsatalas1, D Margaritis1, A Rahemtulla3, I Kotsianidis1, A Karadimitris3.
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27834938 PMCID: PMC5148055 DOI: 10.1038/bcj.2016.108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Cancer J ISSN: 2044-5385 Impact factor: 11.037
Figure 1RANKL expression in PB iNKT and T cells in normal donors. (a) Left: surface RANKL expression in PB T and iNKT cells from normal donors as assessed by flow cytometry. (i) Identification of iNKT cells as CD3+TCRVα24+Vβ11+ cells, (ii) example of RANKL expression on iNKT cells and (iii) on non-iNKT T cells as compared with isotype control (green line) on same cell subsets. Right: cumulative data of RANKL expression on T and iNKT cells shown as MFI expression level in relation to their respective isotype control from 40 normal donors. (b) Left: example of iNKT cell frequency pre- and post-immunomagnetic bead selection performed with an anti-TCRVα24Jα18-specific mAb as described in materials and methods. Right: iNKT/T cell RANKL mRNA level ratio from seven normal donors. Overall, iNKT cells expressed 1.66-fold higher levels of RANKL mRNA than T cells (P=0.043). (c) RANKL expression on normal donor iNKT (left) and T (right) cells after stimulation of total T cells, including iNKT cells with anti-CD3/CD28 beads at different time points (12 and 36 h; n=11). Data shown are MFI. (d) Osteoclast formation in the presence of T and iNKT cell-derived supernatants. Positive control represents monocyte-derived osteoclasts in control cultures with M-CSF (50 ng/ml)+RANKL (25 ng/ml), negative control with M-CSF only and the other two conditions are M-CSF+RANKL (at the permissive dose of 2.5 ng/ml each) plus supernatant from activated iNKT or T cells. Osteoclasts were scored as TRAP+ cells with >3 nuclei on day 14 of the culture. Cumulative data shown as median (range) (n=4 normal donors, P=0.04 by Wilcoxon paired test).
Figure 2RANKL expression in iNKT and T cells in patients with MM. (a) Left: surface RANKL expression on PB T and iNKT cells from patients with active MM. (i) Identification of iNKT cells as CD3+TCRVα24+Vβ11+ cells, (ii) example of RANKL expression on iNKT cells and (iii) on non-iNKT T cells as compared with isotype control (green line) on same cell subsets. Right: cell surface RANKL expression on iNKT cells (dark) vs T cells (grey) in PB from patients with active MM, MGUS/ASM patients and normal donors. Higher surface RANKL expression in MM than normal donor iNKT cells, P=0.027, Mann-Whitney test. (b) RANKL mRNA levels in purified iNKT expressed in relation to paired T cell RANKL mRNA level (n=7 patients with active MM). Overall, iNKT cells expressed 3.52-fold higher levels of RANKL mRNA than T cells (P=0.018). (c) Cell surface RANKL expression (shown as MFI in relation to isotype control) in iNKT and T cells, respectively, from eight patients with active MM upon stimulation with anti-CD3/CD28 beads at 0 and 36 h. (d) Left: median frequency of iNKT cells in CD3+ cells in the BM and PB in MM patients (cumulative data; n=20). Right: cell surface RANKL expression in PB- and BM-derived iNKT cells from patients with active MM (n=20).