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Circulating T cell-monocyte complexes are markers of immune perturbations

Authors :
Jason A. Greenbaum
Randy Taplitz
Julie G. Burel
Gayani Premawansa
Ricardo da Silva Antunes
Pandurangan Vijayanand
Mariana Babor
Yunmin Jung
Veronique Schulten
Mayuko Saito
Robert H. Gilman
Rashmi Tippalagama
Aruna D. deSilva
Klaus Ley
Ananda Wijewickrama
Daniela Weiskopf
Cecilia S. Lindestam Arlehamn
Grégory Seumois
Bjoern Peters
Alessandro Sette
Dhammika Vidanagama
Mikhail Pomaznoy
Bandu Gunasena
Sunil Premawansa
Source :
eLife, Vol 8 (2019), eLife, Cytometry A
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
eLife Sciences Publications Ltd, 2019.

Abstract

Our results highlight for the first time that a significant proportion of cell doublets in flow cytometry, previously believed to be the result of technical artifacts and thus ignored in data acquisition and analysis, are the result of biological interaction between immune cells. In particular, we show that cell:cell doublets pairing a T cell and a monocyte can be directly isolated from human blood, and high resolution microscopy shows polarized distribution of LFA1/ICAM1 in many doublets, suggesting in vivo formation. Intriguingly, T cell-monocyte complex frequency and phenotype fluctuate with the onset of immune perturbations such as infection or immunization, reflecting expected polarization of immune responses. Overall these data suggest that cell doublets reflecting T cell-monocyte in vivo immune interactions can be detected in human blood and that the common approach in flow cytometry to avoid studying cell:cell complexes should be re-visited.

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
eLife
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b0730d06ef0dbb09da168124efb6695c