| Literature DB >> 30970663 |
Eva Kritikou1, Marie A C Depuydt2, Margreet R de Vries3,4, Kevin E Mulder5, Arthur M Govaert6,7, Marrit D Smit8,9, Janine van Duijn10, Amanda C Foks10, Anouk Wezel11, Harm J Smeets12, Bram Slütter13, Paul H A Quax14,15, Johan Kuiper16, Ilze Bot17.
Abstract
The presence of mast cells in human atherosclerotic plaques has been associated with adverse cardiovascular events. Mast cell activation, through the classical antigen sensitized-IgE binding to their characteristic Fcε-receptor, causes the release of their cytoplasmic granules. These granules are filled with neutral proteases such as tryptase, but also with histamine and pro-inflammatory mediators. Mast cells accumulate in high numbers within human atherosclerotic tissue, particularly in the shoulder region of the plaque. These findings are largely based on immunohistochemistry, which does not allow for the extensive characterization of these mast cells and of the local mast cell activation mechanisms. In this study, we thus aimed to develop a new flow-cytometry based methodology in order to analyze mast cells in human atherosclerosis. We enzymatically digested 22 human plaque samples, collected after femoral and carotid endarterectomy surgery, after which we prepared a single cell suspension for flow cytometry. We were able to identify a specific mast cell population expressing both CD117 and the FcεR, and observed that most of the intraplaque mast cells were activated based on their CD63 protein expression. Furthermore, most of the activated mast cells had IgE fragments bound on their surface, while another fraction showed IgE-independent activation. In conclusion, we are able to distinguish a clear mast cell population in human atherosclerotic plaques, and this study establishes a strong relationship between the presence of IgE and the activation of mast cells in advanced atherosclerosis. Our data pave the way for potential therapeutic intervention through targeting IgE-mediated actions in human atherosclerosis.Entities:
Keywords: atherosclerosis; flow cytometry; mast cell; plaque stability; tryptase
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30970663 PMCID: PMC6523866 DOI: 10.3390/cells8040334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Semiquantitative grading scale for the histology score of human endarterectomy specimen.
| Grade | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| No sign of necrotic core | <20% of the arterial area | 20–40% of the arterial area | 40–70% of the arterial area | >70% |
|
| No sign of calcification | <10% of the arterial area | 10–40% of the arterial area | >40% of the arterial area | |
|
| No sign of foam cells | Small | Intermediate | Large | |
|
| No sign of cholesterol crystal | <10% of the necrotic core | 10–40% of the necrotic core | >40% of the necrotic core | |
|
| No sign of neovasculari-zation | <25 neovessels in the whole tissue | 25–50 neovessels in whole tissue | >50 neovessels in the whole tissue | |
|
| No sign of inflammatory cells | Small | Intermediate | Large | |
|
| Not detectable * | No sign of shoulder regions | One sided shoulder region | Two-sided shoulder region | |
|
| No sign of IPH | <10% IPH of the arterial area | 10–40% IPH of the arterial area | >40% IPH of the arterial area | |
|
| No SMC visible | <20% of the ECM area | 20–40% of the ECM area | >40% of the ECM area | |
|
| No | Yes (rupture) |
SMC—smooth muscle cell; ECM—extracellular matrix.
List of extracellular and intracellular antibodies used.
| Antibody | Fluorochrome | Clone | Concentration | Company |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fixable Viability Dye | eFluor 780 | - | 0.1 μg/sample | eBioscience |
| CD45 | PB | 2D1 | 0.25 μg/sample | eBioscience |
| FcεRIα | APC/PE Cy7 | AER-37 | 0.12 μg/sample | eBioscience |
| CD117 | PercP Cy5.5 | 104D2 | 0.1 μg/sample | eBioscience |
| CD63 | PE | H5C6 | 0.1 μg/sample | eBioscience |
| IgE | PE Cy7/FITC | Ige21 | 0.25 μg/sample | eBioscience |
|
|
| - | 0.1 μg/sample | LSBio |
Figure 1Human plaque characteristics. (A) Examples of Movat’s pentachrome stained human endarterectomy plaques. (B) Assessment of the plaque stability parameters of the individual plaques used for mast cell flow cytometry. SMC—smooth muscle cell; ECM—extracellular matrix.
Figure 2Mast cell content in human plaques. (A) Human plaque cell gating strategy using flow cytometry. Human intraplaque cells were selected based on their size and area. The viable cells were further separated according to the negative incorporation of fluorescent viability dye (FVD−). Immune cells were detected using the pan-leukocyte marker CD45+. (B) Both the femoral and carotid artery plaques contain CD45+ immune cells. (C) The human mast cell population was further classified using antibodies against the characteristic markers FcεRIα+ and CD117+. (D) Mast cell percentage inside human plaques isolated upon endarterectomy surgeries in carotid and femoral arteries. (E) Absolute mast cell numbers of human carotid and femoral artery samples. The data are depicted as mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM); (n = 10–12/grp).
Figure 3Activation of human intraplaque mast cells. (A) Number of activated mast cells, as defined by marker CD63, inside the carotid and femoral artery human plaques. (B) Percentage of activated mast cells in human atherosclerotic plaques. (C) Percentage of IgE+ mast cells in human atherosclerotic plaques. (D) Percentage of IgE+CD63−, IgE+CD63+, and of IgE−CD63+ mast cells of both carotid and femoral human atherosclerotic plaques combined. (E) Percentage of IgE+CD63−, IgE+CD63+, and of IgE−CD63+ mast cells displayed separately for carotid and femoral arteries, showing a similar pattern per plaque location. Data are depicted as mean ± SEM; A, B, C, and E: n = 10–12/grp; D: n = 22.
Figure 4Tryptase content of mast cells in human atherosclerotic plaques. (A) Immunohistochemical tryptase staining of a human atherosclerotic plaque. Arrows indicate activated mast cells. (B) Number (left panel) and percentage (right panel) of mast cells containing tryptase in human carotid and femoral arteries based on flow cytometry. (C) Flow cytometry plot examples of tryptase+ mast cells, that is, left panel: low tryptase expression (7% of the mast cell population) vs. right panel: high tryptase expression (94% of the mast cell population). Values are depicted as mean ± SEM.