In vitro phenotype induction of circulating monocytes: CD16 and CD163 analysis
Author
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Karsulovic Cvitanich, Claudio
Author
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Tempio, Fabián
Author
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López Nitsche, Mercedes
Author
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Guerrero Peralta, Julia
Author
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Goecke Sariego, Irmgadt
Admission date
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2021-08-24T13:09:32Z
Available date
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2021-08-24T13:09:32Z
Publication date
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2021
Cita de ítem
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Journal of Inflammation Research 2021:14 191–198
es_ES
Identifier
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10.2147/JIR.S292513
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/181454
Abstract
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Introduction: CD14 (monocyte differentiation antigen, LPS binding protein - endotoxin receptor) and CD16 (FcyRIII, Low-affinity receptor for IgG) define three subpopulations of circulating monocytes with different inflammatory and phagocytic capabilities. Contradictory reports exist regarding both in vivo monocyte phenotype-disease association and response of these circulating monocytes to in vitro stimulation. We analyzed phenotypic changes in circulating monocytes when stimulated with LPS (pro-inflammatory stimulus) and IL-4 (alternative inflammatory stimulus).
Methods: Mononuclear cells from nine healthy donors were extracted and studied for surface and intracellular markers using flow cytometry. PBMC were extracted using Ficoll technic and immediately analyzed using flow cytometry. Pro-inflammatory interleukin IL-1 beta and IL-6 were measured by intracellular cytometry. Mononuclear cells were stimulated using LPS and IL-4 as previously described. Changes against non-stimulated populations were statistically analyzed.
Results: Compared to non-stimulated and IL-4 stimulated monocytes, LPS-stimulated cells display a singular pattern of markers, with higher levels of intracellular IL-1 beta and IL-6 directly correlating with CD14+CD163- cell frequency and diminishing membrane CD163 fluorescence. CD14+CD16- classical monocytes show greater percentage of CD163- cells upon LPS stimulation. CD86 levels on monocytes' surface did not change with LPS or IL-4 stimulation.
Conclusions and Discussion: We showed that CD14+CD16- classical monocytes display higher sensitivity to LPS stimulation, with more IL-1 beta and IL-6 levels than intermediate and non-classical monocytes. This subset also diminishes its CD163 levels on the membrane after LPS stimulation with a contemporary raise in CD163- cells, suggesting that classical monocytes preferentially acquire CD163- defined M1 characteristics upon in vitro LPS stimulation. Intermediate and non-classical monocytes respond with lower levels of interleukins and display surface proteins in an M2-type profile (CD163+).
es_ES
Patrocinador
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Investigation Support Office (OAIC) at Hospital Clinico de la Universidad de Chile