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BD Biosciences Technical Protocol October 2013 Culture and Identification of Human Monocyte Derived Dendritic Cells Introduction Dendritic cells (DCs) are professional antigen presenting cells (APCs) that play a critical role in regulation of adaptive immune responses. They are also referred to as a missing link between innate and adaptive immune responses. DCs perform the important role of capturing and processing antigen and presenting it to naive T-helper cells to initiate an immune response. Distinct subsets of DCs have been described and they show great heterogeneity. Their phenotype changes according to their stage of differentiation or according to their response and interaction with cytokines and/or growth factors in their microenvironment. The phenotypes described in the literature are highlighted in the tables shown in Appendix 1. DCs present a scientific challenge because there is presently no single monoclonal antibody that recognizes all dendritic cells. This protocol focuses primarily on blood dendritic cells. The two types of DCs identified in large numbers in blood, the myeloid DCs (CD11c+/CD123–) and plasmacytoid DCs (CD123+/ CD11c–). These are immature, resting DCs in the peripheral blood which lack the expression of known lineage markers such as CD3, CD19, CD56, CD16, and CD14 bright. Cultivation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in the presence of GM-CSF, IL-4, and TNF has been shown to induce the differentiation of monocyte-derived DCs (MDCs) in vitro. The phenotypic characteristics observed in cultured dendritic cells are different from cultured PBMCs. The addition of growth factors and cytokines induce cultured MDCs to increase in CD40, CD80, CD83, CD86, and HLA-DR expression while decreasing CD14 and CD1a. Using the recommended reagents affords researchers the ability to optimize the incubation time to best suit their needs. Under these culture conditions, one is able to analyze a greater number of cells than in peripheral blood or tissue. We recommend that the cells be cultured for a minimum of three days to start observing the characteristic phenotype. A panel of monoclonal antibodies is also suggested: they are useful to perform immunophenotypic analysis on MDCs. These antibodies do not indicate or demonstrate any functional characteristics of the cells, but do indicate the expression of the molecules associated with dendritic cell differentiation. Culture and Identification of Human Monocyte Derived Dendritic Cells Cell Culture Protocol Reagents Required Full Name Short Name Cat. No. BD Recombinant Human IL-4 IL-4 554605 BD Recombinant Human GM-CSF GM-CSF 550068 Lipopolysaccharide LPS Sigma L-8274 RPMI-1640 w/o L-glutamine Incomplete RPMI Sigma R0883 RPMI-1640 w/10% fetal bovine serum Complete RPMI T-75 Tissue Culture Flask T-75 353110 Ficoll-Hypaque (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech AB) BD Vacutainer® blood collection tubes 17-0840-02 tubes 366480 • Dilution Buffer: IMDM with 25 mM HEPES buffer with sodium bicarbonate • Culture medium: IMDM, 10% FBS, 1% glutamine, 1% Pen-strep media • PBS Additional Materials Suggested Devices 2-color capable flow cytometer (with 488-nm laser ) FL1-FITC (520 nm), FL2-PE (576 nm), with FL1 detection through a 515–545-nm bandpass filter and FL2 detection through a 561–606-nm bandpass filter. Centrifuge Beckman TJ-6 or similar with swinging bucket rotor capable of centrifugation of at least 2,000 RPM. Fluid Handling Polypropylene tubes: 12 × 75-mm and 17 × 120-mm (15 mL) Graduated conical centrifuge tubes: 50 mL Micropipettes Capable of dispensing 20-μL, 100-μL and 500-μL volumes Biologics Recombinant human TNF (Cat. No. 554618) Vortex mixer Aspirator Procedural Notes • Use of freshly prepared PBMCs is recommended. If frozen PBMCs must be used, conditions for post-thaw cell recovery should be optimized to ensure appropriate cellular responsiveness to stimuli. • The activity of our recombinants is lot-specific, so some optimization might be required. • Most molecules show good expression by the third or forth day of culture. Optimal expression is usually seen around the fifth and sixth day of culture. Cell viability might decline after the seventh day. • DCs will be sticky on the plates and need to be removed carefully to collect as many as possible and increase cell numbers. Cell Separation Procedure 1. Collect blood in a sodium heparin tube. 5. Centrifuge at room temperature, 400g, for 20 minutes. 2. Dilute blood 1:2 in PBS. 3. Add 5 mL of Ficoll-Hypaque to a labeled 15-ml conical centrifuge tube. 6. Carefully remove the top layer and discard. Transfer the cells at the interface of the solution into a clean 15-mL conical tube. 4. Add 10 mL of diluted peripheral blood to the top of the 5-mL Ficoll-Hypaque (overlay). 7. Wash twice with dilution buffer. Centrifuge at 200g, for 10 minutes. 8. Suspend the PBMCs in IMDM culture medium at 4 × 106 cells per mL. Cell Culture Procedure 1. Add 8 mL of the cell suspension into a T-25 culture flask and incubate at 37°C, 7% CO2 for 2–3 hours. 4. Incubate at 37°C, 7% CO2, at 100% humidity for 4 to 7 days. 2. Gently shake and discard non-adherent cells by washing twice with pre-warmed culture medium. 5. Add recombinant TNF to a final concentration of 20 ng/mL on the fifth day of incubation. 3. Add 10 mL of culture medium with a final concentration of 20 ng/mL and GM-CSF 20 ng/mL IL-4. 6. Harvest the cells as cultured human MDCs. Page 2 Culture and Identification of Human Monocyte Derived Dendritic Cells Cell Immunophenotyping Protocol Reagents Required Full Name Short Name Cat. No. CD1a FITC clone HI149 CD1a FITC 555806 CD40 PE clone 5C3 CD40 PE 555589 HLA-DR PE Clone G46-6 HLA-DR PE 555812 CD80 FITC clone L307.4 CD80 FITC 557226 CD86 FITC clone 2331 CD86 FITC 555657 CD83 PE clone HB15e CD83 PE 556855 CD14 PE clone M5E2 CD14 PE 555398 Isotype control PE-IgG1 IgG1 PE control 555749 Isotype control FITC-IgG1 IgG1 FITC control 555748 Isotype control PE-IgG2a IgG2a PE control 555574 • Wash Buffer: PBS + 1% FBS +1% sodium azide Procedural Notes • Each cell surface molecule will vary in expression with culture time and donor. • We recommend that each investigator titrate the antibody to obtain optimal results. • For analysis, set the cytometer with the lymphocytes at the very low left corner in as tightly as possible to see the DCs, since the DCs are observed as large cells by FSC vs SSC. • Although cultured dendritic cells have a different light scatter than that of whole blood or PBMCs, the instrument settings used for whole blood or PBMC analysis are usually adequate. DCs are larger in size and have greater granularity than lymphocytes and monocytes. Staining Procedure 1. Adjust the cell concentration to 0.5–1 × 106 cells/mL. 2. Add 100 μL of cell suspension to each 12 × 75-mm tube. 3. The following controls should be included: – Cells with PBS – Cells with isotype control 4. Add the monoclonal antibodies into the tubes at the predetermined concentration. Mix well. 5. Incubate in the dark at room temperature for 20–30 minutes. 6. Add 2 mL of wash buffer. Mix well and centrifuge for 5 minutes at 200g. 7. Aspirate the supernatant, resuspend the cells in 0.5 mL of wash buffer, and vortex. 8. Analyze by flow cytometry. Page 3 Culture and Identification of Human Monocyte Derived Dendritic Cells Page 4 Appendix 1 Different DC subtypes and their salient surface markers from literature DC subset DC type Key surface markers DC subset DC type Key surface markers Plasmacytoid DCs Lymphoid resident DCs B220 DC SIGN++CD207–CD103– CD205–CD11b–EPCAM– CD8a+++ CD11b DCs Migratory DCs B220–DC–SIGNndCD207– CD103+/– CD205+EPCAM–CD8a– CD11b+ CD8a+ DCs Lymphoid resident DCs B220-DC–SIGN–CD11b+ CD207+/CD103lowCD205+ EPCAM–CD8a– CD103+ DCs • lung Migratory DCs B220–DC–SIGN– CD207+CD103+CD205++ EPCAM+/–CD8aa– CD11b– CD4+ DCs Lymphoid resident DCs B220–DC–SIGN– CD11b+CD207–CD103– CD205–EPCAM–CD8a– CD103+ DCs • intestine DN DCs Lymphoid resident DCs B220–DC–SIGN– CD11b+CD207–CD103– CD205–EPCAM–CD8aa– + – + DC subset B220–DC–SIGN–CD207– CD103+CD205– EPCAM–CD8a–CD11b+ DC type Key surface markers Langerhans cells B220–DC–SIGN– CD207++CD103– CD205++EPCAM+ CD8a–CD11b+ Monocyte-derived DCs B220–DC–SIGN+CD207– CD103–CD11b+CD205– EPCAM–CD8a– References Immunophenotyping Belz GT, Nutt SL. Transcriptional programming of the dendritic cell network. Nat Rev Immunol. 2012;12:101-113. Yan de Laar L, Coffer PJ, and Wolfman AM. Regulation of dendritic cell development by GM-CSF: molecular control and implications for immune homeostasis and therapy. Blood. 2012;12,119:3383-3393. Other Markers Azuma M, Ito D, Yagida H, et al. B70 antigen is a second ligand for CTLA-4 and CD28. Nature, 1993;366:76-79. Barclay AN, Brown MH, Law SKA, et al, eds. The Leucocyte Antigen Facts Book, second edition. MHC Class II Section. San Diego, California: Academic Press, Inc. 1997;567. Engel P, Gribben JG, Freeman GJ, et al. The B7-2 (B70) costimulatory molecule expressed by monocytes and activated B lymphocyte is the CD86 differentiation antigen. Blood. 1994;84:1402-1407. Hart DN. Dendritic cells: unique leukocyte populations which control the primary immune response. Blood.1997;90:3245-3287. Kishimoto T, Kikutani H, von dem Borne AEG, et al, eds. Leucocyte Typing VI: White Cell Differentiation Antigens. London: Garland Press;1998. Nunez R, Filgueira L. Flow cytometric assessment of the reactivity of a panel of monoclonal antibodies (mAb) against two populations of human dendritic cells (DC). BMC Immunol. 2001;2:6. Schwartz RH. Costimulation of T lymphocytes: the role of CD28, CTLA-4, and B7/BB1 in interleukin-2 production and immunotherapy. Cell. 1992;71:1065-1068. Wright SD, Ramos RA, Tobias PS, Ulevitch RJ, Mathison JC. CD14, a receptor for complexes of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and LPS binding protein. Science. 1990;249:1431-1433. Zhou L-J, Tedder TF. Human blood dendritic cells selectively express CD83, a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily. J Immunol.1995;154:3821-3835. For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic or therapeutic procedures. Ficoll-Hypaque is a trademark of GE Healthcare. 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