Thomas W McDade1, Jacob E Aronoff, Adam K K Leigh, Eric D Finegood, Rachel M Weissman-Tsukamoto, Gene H Brody, Gregory E Miller. 1. From the Departments of Anthropology (McDade, Aronoff) and Psychology (Miller), Institute for Policy Research (McDade, Leigh, Finegood, Weissman-Tsukamoto, Miller), Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois; and Center for Family Research (Brody), Owens Institute for Behavioral Research, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Field-based research on inflammation and health is typically limited to baseline measures of circulating cytokines or acute-phase proteins, whereas laboratory-based studies can pursue a more dynamic approach with ex vivo cell culture methods. The laboratory infrastructure required for culturing leukocytes limits application in community-based settings, which in turn limits scientific understandings of how psychosocial, behavioral, and contextual factors influence the regulation of inflammation. We aim to address this gap by validating two "field-friendly" cell culture protocols, one using a small volume of venous whole blood and another using finger-stick capillary whole blood. METHODS: We evaluated the performance of both protocols against a standard laboratory-based protocol using matched venous and capillary blood samples collected from young adults (n = 24). Samples were incubated with lipopolysaccharide and hydrocortisone, and the production of proinflammatory cytokines interleukin 1β, interleukin 6, and tumor necrosis factor α was measured in response. RESULTS: Comparisons indicate a high level of agreement in responses across the protocols and culture conditions. The overall correlation in results was 0.88 between the standard and small-volume protocols and 0.86 between the standard and capillary blood protocols. Repeatability for the small-volume and capillary blood protocols was high, with mean coefficients of variation across five replicates of 6.2% and 5.4%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate the feasibility of culturing cells and quantifying the inflammatory response to challenge outside the laboratory, with a wide range of potential applications in biobehavioral research in community-based and remote field settings.
OBJECTIVE: Field-based research on inflammation and health is typically limited to baseline measures of circulating cytokines or acute-phase proteins, whereas laboratory-based studies can pursue a more dynamic approach with ex vivo cell culture methods. The laboratory infrastructure required for culturing leukocytes limits application in community-based settings, which in turn limits scientific understandings of how psychosocial, behavioral, and contextual factors influence the regulation of inflammation. We aim to address this gap by validating two "field-friendly" cell culture protocols, one using a small volume of venous whole blood and another using finger-stick capillary whole blood. METHODS: We evaluated the performance of both protocols against a standard laboratory-based protocol using matched venous and capillary blood samples collected from young adults (n = 24). Samples were incubated with lipopolysaccharide and hydrocortisone, and the production of proinflammatory cytokines interleukin 1β, interleukin 6, and tumor necrosis factor α was measured in response. RESULTS: Comparisons indicate a high level of agreement in responses across the protocols and culture conditions. The overall correlation in results was 0.88 between the standard and small-volume protocols and 0.86 between the standard and capillary blood protocols. Repeatability for the small-volume and capillary blood protocols was high, with mean coefficients of variation across five replicates of 6.2% and 5.4%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate the feasibility of culturing cells and quantifying the inflammatory response to challenge outside the laboratory, with a wide range of potential applications in biobehavioral research in community-based and remote field settings.
Authors: Gregory E Miller; Edith Chen; Alexandra K Fok; Hope Walker; Alvin Lim; Erin F Nicholls; Steve Cole; Michael S Kobor Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Date: 2009-07-14 Impact factor: 11.205
Authors: J G Norman; G W Fink; W Denham; J Yang; G Carter; C Sexton; J Falkner; W R Gower; M G Franz Journal: Dig Dis Sci Date: 1997-08 Impact factor: 3.199