Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
6,858
result(s) for
"immunophenotyping"
Sort by:
Standardizing immunophenotyping for the Human Immunology Project
by
Nussenblatt, Robert
,
McCoy, J. Philip
,
Maecker, Holden T.
in
631/1647/1407/1492
,
631/1647/664
,
631/250/249
2012
Key Points
Standardized immunophenotyping assays are a requisite for accomplishing the proposed Human Immunology Project, which involves the comprehensive elucidation of the metrics of healthy versus diseased or perturbed human immune systems.
The variables inherent in flow cytometry immunophenotyping are largely known, and include reagent choice, sample handling, instrument setup and data analysis; strategies to mitigate each of these variables are available.
Several groups, including the Human Immunophenotyping Consortium, are standardizing reagent panels for flow cytometry.
Together with the adoption of such standard panels, an infrastructure for aggregating and mining results will be needed.
Availability of such panels and the data-mining infrastructure should result in more rapid biomarker discovery for immunologically relevant diseases.
The authors use flow cytometry of peripheral blood mononuclear cells as an example to outline the approaches to assay standardization that will be required to realize the full potential of immunophenotyping as a research tool and in the clinic.
The heterogeneity in the healthy human immune system, and the immunological changes that portend various diseases, have been only partially described. Their comprehensive elucidation has been termed the 'Human Immunology Project'. The accurate measurement of variations in the human immune system requires precise and standardized assays to distinguish true biological changes from technical artefacts. Thus, to be successful, the Human Immunology Project will require standardized assays for immunophenotyping humans in health and disease. A major tool in this effort is flow cytometry, which remains highly variable with regard to sample handling, reagents, instrument setup and data analysis. In this Review, we outline the current state of standardization of flow cytometry assays and summarize the steps that are required to enable the Human Immunology Project.
Journal Article
Next Generation Flow for highly sensitive and standardized detection of minimal residual disease in multiple myeloma
2017
Flow cytometry has become a highly valuable method to monitor minimal residual disease (MRD) and evaluate the depth of complete response (CR) in bone marrow (BM) of multiple myeloma (MM) after therapy. However, current flow-MRD has lower sensitivity than molecular methods and lacks standardization. Here we report on a novel next generation flow (NGF) approach for highly sensitive and standardized MRD detection in MM. An optimized 2-tube 8-color antibody panel was constructed in five cycles of design-evaluation-redesign. In addition, a bulk-lysis procedure was established for acquisition of ⩾10
7
cells/sample, and novel software tools were constructed for automatic plasma cell gating. Multicenter evaluation of 110 follow-up BM from MM patients in very good partial response (VGPR) or CR showed a higher sensitivity for NGF-MRD vs conventional 8-color flow-MRD -MRD-positive rate of 47 vs 34% (
P
=0.003)-. Thus, 25% of patients classified as MRD-negative by conventional 8-color flow were MRD-positive by NGF, translating into a significantly longer progression-free survival for MRD-negative vs MRD-positive CR patients by NGF (75% progression-free survival not reached vs 7 months;
P
=0.02). This study establishes EuroFlow-based NGF as a highly sensitive, fully standardized approach for MRD detection in MM which overcomes the major limitations of conventional flow-MRD methods and is ready for implementation in routine diagnostics.
Journal Article
Standardizing Flow Cytometry Immunophenotyping Analysis from the Human ImmunoPhenotyping Consortium
2016
Standardization of immunophenotyping requires careful attention to reagents, sample handling, instrument setup, and data analysis, and is essential for successful cross-study and cross-center comparison of data. Experts developed five standardized, eight-color panels for identification of major immune cell subsets in peripheral blood. These were produced as pre-configured, lyophilized, reagents in 96-well plates. We present the results of a coordinated analysis of samples across nine laboratories using these panels with standardized operating procedures (SOPs). Manual gating was performed by each site and by a central site. Automated gating algorithms were developed and tested by the FlowCAP consortium. Centralized manual gating can reduce cross-center variability, and we sought to determine whether automated methods could streamline and standardize the analysis. Within-site variability was low in all experiments, but cross-site variability was lower when central analysis was performed in comparison with site-specific analysis. It was also lower for clearly defined cell subsets than those based on dim markers and for rare populations. Automated gating was able to match the performance of central manual analysis for all tested panels, exhibiting little to no bias and comparable variability. Standardized staining, data collection, and automated gating can increase power, reduce variability, and streamline analysis for immunophenotyping.
Journal Article
Hydrodynamic stretching of single cells for large population mechanical phenotyping
2012
Cell state is often assayed through measurement of biochemical and biophysical markers. Although biochemical markers have been widely used, intrinsic biophysical markers, such as the ability to mechanically deform under a load, are advantageous in that they do not require costly labeling or sample preparation. However, current techniques that assay cell mechanical properties have had limited adoption in clinical and cell biology research applications. Here, we demonstrate an automated microfluidic technology capable of probing single-cell deformability at approximately 2,000 cells/s. The method uses inertial focusing to uniformly deliver cells to a stretching extensional flow where cells are deformed at high strain rates, imaged with a high-speed camera, and computationally analyzed to extract quantitative parameters. This approach allows us to analyze cells at throughputs orders of magnitude faster than previously reported biophysical flow cytometers and single-cell mechanics tools, while creating easily observable larger strains and limiting user time commitment and bias through automation. Using this approach we rapidly assay the deformability of native populations of leukocytes and malignant cells in pleural effusions and accurately predict disease state in patients with cancer and immune activation with a sensitivity of 91% and a specificity of 86%. As a tool for biological research, we show the deformability we measure is an early biomarker for pluripotent stem cell differentiation and is likely linked to nuclear structural changes. Microfluidic deformability cytometry brings the statistical accuracy of traditional flow cytometric techniques to label-free biophysical biomarkers, enabling applications in clinical diagnostics, stem cell characterization, and single-cell biophysics.
Journal Article
Evaluating Pediatric Reference Ranges for Extended Immunophenotyping from a Finnish Cohort against Published References
by
Askeli, Samuel
,
Lusila, Pauliina
,
Heinonen, Santtu
in
Adult
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
2025
Flow cytometric immunophenotyping of lymphocytes and dendritic cells, and functional lymphocyte mitogen response tests are used in the diagnostics of inborn errors of immunity (IEI), especially in pediatrics. These routinely used tests lack sufficient age-matched reference values in children. We established reference values for lymphocyte and dendritic cell subsets for four age groups from 68 healthy children under 12 years of age. These values were then compared to prior publicly available articles and 46 clinical samples from children with confirmed IEI diagnosis. Mitogen response results were also compared between 27 children and 177 adults. In the literature review, we found considerable variability in lymphocyte subset definitions and statistical approaches. Most IEI patients had increased transitional and naïve B, and decreased memory B cells. CHH patients had increased γδ T and DNTs. Lymphocyte stimulation via FASCIA method provides weaker stimulation results in children than in adults, which seems to result from a larger proportional count of naïve lymphocytes in children. The established reference values can be used in diagnostics of pediatric immunological conditions in laboratories that use similar analytic methods. Lower lymphocyte mitogen response results in children need to be taken into consideration when interpreting the results of lymphocyte functional tests.
Journal Article
EuroFlow standardization of flow cytometer instrument settings and immunophenotyping protocols
by
Böttcher, S
,
Szczepański, T
,
Martin-Ayuso, M
in
631/114/794
,
631/1647/1407/1492
,
692/699/67/1990
2012
The EU-supported EuroFlow Consortium aimed at innovation and standardization of immunophenotyping for diagnosis and classification of hematological malignancies by introducing 8-color flow cytometry with fully standardized laboratory procedures and antibody panels in order to achieve maximally comparable results among different laboratories. This required the selection of optimal combinations of compatible fluorochromes and the design and evaluation of adequate standard operating procedures (SOPs) for instrument setup, fluorescence compensation and sample preparation. Additionally, we developed software tools for the evaluation of individual antibody reagents and antibody panels. Each section describes what has been evaluated experimentally versus adopted based on existing data and experience. Multicentric evaluation demonstrated high levels of reproducibility based on strict implementation of the EuroFlow SOPs and antibody panels. Overall, the 6 years of extensive collaborative experiments and the analysis of hundreds of cell samples of patients and healthy controls in the EuroFlow centers have provided for the first time laboratory protocols and software tools for fully standardized 8-color flow cytometric immunophenotyping of normal and malignant leukocytes in bone marrow and blood; this has yielded highly comparable data sets, which can be integrated in a single database.
Journal Article
Extrafollicular B cell responses correlate with neutralizing antibodies and morbidity in COVID-19
by
Woodruff, Matthew C.
,
Haddad, Natalie S.
,
Nguyen, Doan C.
in
631/250
,
631/250/2152
,
631/250/254
2020
A wide spectrum of clinical manifestations has become a hallmark of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) COVID-19 pandemic, although the immunological underpinnings of diverse disease outcomes remain to be defined. We performed detailed characterization of B cell responses through high-dimensional flow cytometry to reveal substantial heterogeneity in both effector and immature populations. More notably, critically ill patients displayed hallmarks of extrafollicular B cell activation and shared B cell repertoire features previously described in autoimmune settings. Extrafollicular activation correlated strongly with large antibody-secreting cell expansion and early production of high concentrations of SARS-CoV-2-specific neutralizing antibodies. Yet, these patients had severe disease with elevated inflammatory biomarkers, multiorgan failure and death. Overall, these findings strongly suggest a pathogenic role for immune activation in subsets of patients with COVID-19. Our study provides further evidence that targeted immunomodulatory therapy may be beneficial in specific patient subpopulations and can be informed by careful immune profiling.
Sanz and colleagues examine B cell subsets in a cohort of patients with COVID-19. Severely ill patients have higher frequencies of activated extrafollicular T-bet
+
B cells that form antibody-secreting cells, the majority of which express germline sequences and are reminiscent of antibody responses observed in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus during flares.
Journal Article
Neutrophils and granulocytic myeloid-derived suppressor cells: immunophenotyping, cell biology and clinical relevance in human oncology
by
Moses, Katrin
,
Brandau, Sven
,
Dumitru, Claudia A.
in
Antigens
,
Antineoplastic agents
,
Biological and medical sciences
2012
Accumulating evidence indicates that myeloid cells are critically involved in the pathophysiology of human cancers. In contrast to the well-characterized tumor-associated macrophages, the significance of granulocytes in cancer has only recently begun to emerge. A number of studies found increased numbers of neutrophil granulocytes and granulocytic myeloid-derived suppressor cells (GrMDSCs) both in the peripheral blood and in the tumor tissues of patients with different types of cancer. Most importantly, granulocytes have been linked to poor clinical outcome in cancer patients which suggests that these cells might have important tumor-promoting effects. In this review, we will address in detail the following major topics: (1) neutrophils and GrMDSCs in the peripheral blood of cancer patients—phenotype and functional changes; (2) neutrophils and GrMDSCs in the tumor tissue—potential mechanisms of tumor progression and (3) relevance of neutrophils and GrMDSCs for the clinical outcome of cancer patients. Furthermore, we will discuss the advantages and disadvantages of the current strategies used for identification and monitoring of human MDSCs. We propose a six-color immunophenotyping protocol that discriminates between monocytic MDSCs (MoMDSCs), two subsets of GrMDSCs and two subsets of immature myeloid cells in human cancer patients, thus, allowing for an improved characterization and understanding of these multifaceted cells.
Journal Article
The EuroFlow PID Orientation Tube for Flow Cytometric Diagnostic Screening of Primary Immunodeficiencies of the Lymphoid System
2019
In the rapidly evolving field of primary immunodeficiencies (PID), the EuroFlow consortium decided to develop a PID orientation and screening tube that facilitates fast, standardized, and validated immunophenotypic diagnosis of lymphoid PID, and allows full exchange of data between centers. Our aim was to develop a tool that would be universal for all lymphoid PIDs and offer high sensitivity to identify a lymphoid PID (without a need for specificity to diagnose particular PID) and to guide and prioritize further diagnostic modalities and clinical management. The tube composition has been defined in a stepwise manner through several cycles of design-testing-evaluation-redesign in a multicenter setting. Equally important appeared to be the standardized pre-analytical procedures (sample preparation and instrument setup), analytical procedures (immunostaining and data acquisition), the software analysis (a multidimensional view based on a reference database in Infinicyt software), and data interpretation. This standardized EuroFlow concept has been tested on 250 healthy controls and 99 PID patients with defined genetic defects. In addition, an application of new EuroFlow software tools with multidimensional pattern recognition was designed with inclusion of maturation pathways in multidimensional patterns (APS plots). The major advantage of the EuroFlow approach is that data can be fully exchanged between different laboratories in any country of the world, which is especially of interest for the PID field, with generally low numbers of cases per center.
Journal Article
Single-cell profiling of myasthenia gravis identifies a pathogenic T cell signature
by
Lanzavecchia, Antonio
,
Utz, Sebastian G
,
Marafioti, Teresa
in
Antigens
,
Autoantibodies
,
Autoantigens
2021
Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease characterized by impaired neuromuscular signaling due to autoantibodies targeting the acetylcholine receptor. Although its auto-antigens and effector mechanisms are well defined, the cellular and molecular drivers underpinning MG remain elusive. Here, we employed high-dimensional single-cell mass and spectral cytometry of blood and thymus samples from MG patients in combination with supervised and unsupervised machine-learning tools to gain insight into the immune dysregulation underlying MG. By creating a comprehensive immune map, we identified two dysregulated subsets of inflammatory circulating memory T helper (Th) cells. These signature ThCD103 and ThGM cells populated the diseased thymus, were reduced in the blood of MG patients, and were inversely correlated with disease severity. Both signature Th subsets rebounded in the blood of MG patients after surgical thymus removal, indicative of their role as cellular markers of disease activity. Together, this in-depth analysis of the immune landscape of MG provides valuable insight into disease pathogenesis, suggests novel biomarkers and identifies new potential therapeutic targets for treatment.
Journal Article