Nilika Bhattacharya, Collin Jugler, Jessica C Hill, Kade R Copple, Sameena Nikhat, Mohsen Khosravi-Maharlooei, Casey R Ager
{"title":"OMIP-118: 38个标记光谱流式细胞术小组评估人类调节性T细胞表型和谱系可塑性。","authors":"Nilika Bhattacharya, Collin Jugler, Jessica C Hill, Kade R Copple, Sameena Nikhat, Mohsen Khosravi-Maharlooei, Casey R Ager","doi":"10.1002/cyto.a.24966","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>We report the optimization of a 38-parameter spectral flow cytometry panel to identify, phenotype, and assess lineage plasticity of human regulatory T cells (Tregs). Tregs are an indispensable T cell lineage with pleiotropic tolerogenic functions whose activities contribute critically to numerous disease settings including cancer, autoimmunity, and infectious disease, among others. Phenotypic and functional heterogeneity within the Treg lineage has been appreciated, but the etiology and impact of Treg plasticity across disease states remain incompletely understood. Better tools are thus needed to deeply characterize human Treg phenotypic heterogeneity at the single cell level to advance discovery of Treg-based biomarkers in disease and to assess the effects of Treg-directed therapeutics. To this end, our 38-parameter panel consists of a 13-marker PBMC backbone module to broadly phenotype PBMCs while specifically discriminating Tregs, and a 25-marker Treg phenotyping module to determine Treg differentiation state, activation profile, and lineage subtype. In contrast to many high-parameter OMIPs that rely on surface staining only, we incorporated several intracellular targets in this panel. This afforded the opportunity to thoroughly evaluate binding characteristics of all antibodies in both pre-fixation and post-fixation and permeabilization settings; we identify several antibodies eligible for overnight post-fixation staining that require substantially reduced titers as compared to traditional pre-fixation staining, resulting in significant cost savings. Dimensionality reduction and semi-supervised clustering on healthy donor PBMC-derived Tregs profiled by our panel reveal up to 14 discrete Treg phenotypes. In sum, this panel enables deep phenotypic characterization of human Treg heterogeneity in peripheral blood specimens by spectral flow cytometry.</p>","PeriodicalId":11068,"journal":{"name":"Cytometry Part A","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.1000,"publicationDate":"2025-10-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"OMIP-118: A 38-Marker Spectral Flow Cytometry Panel to Assess Human Regulatory T Cell Phenotype and Lineage Plasticity.\",\"authors\":\"Nilika Bhattacharya, Collin Jugler, Jessica C Hill, Kade R Copple, Sameena Nikhat, Mohsen Khosravi-Maharlooei, Casey R Ager\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/cyto.a.24966\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>We report the optimization of a 38-parameter spectral flow cytometry panel to identify, phenotype, and assess lineage plasticity of human regulatory T cells (Tregs). Tregs are an indispensable T cell lineage with pleiotropic tolerogenic functions whose activities contribute critically to numerous disease settings including cancer, autoimmunity, and infectious disease, among others. Phenotypic and functional heterogeneity within the Treg lineage has been appreciated, but the etiology and impact of Treg plasticity across disease states remain incompletely understood. Better tools are thus needed to deeply characterize human Treg phenotypic heterogeneity at the single cell level to advance discovery of Treg-based biomarkers in disease and to assess the effects of Treg-directed therapeutics. To this end, our 38-parameter panel consists of a 13-marker PBMC backbone module to broadly phenotype PBMCs while specifically discriminating Tregs, and a 25-marker Treg phenotyping module to determine Treg differentiation state, activation profile, and lineage subtype. In contrast to many high-parameter OMIPs that rely on surface staining only, we incorporated several intracellular targets in this panel. This afforded the opportunity to thoroughly evaluate binding characteristics of all antibodies in both pre-fixation and post-fixation and permeabilization settings; we identify several antibodies eligible for overnight post-fixation staining that require substantially reduced titers as compared to traditional pre-fixation staining, resulting in significant cost savings. Dimensionality reduction and semi-supervised clustering on healthy donor PBMC-derived Tregs profiled by our panel reveal up to 14 discrete Treg phenotypes. 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OMIP-118: A 38-Marker Spectral Flow Cytometry Panel to Assess Human Regulatory T Cell Phenotype and Lineage Plasticity.
We report the optimization of a 38-parameter spectral flow cytometry panel to identify, phenotype, and assess lineage plasticity of human regulatory T cells (Tregs). Tregs are an indispensable T cell lineage with pleiotropic tolerogenic functions whose activities contribute critically to numerous disease settings including cancer, autoimmunity, and infectious disease, among others. Phenotypic and functional heterogeneity within the Treg lineage has been appreciated, but the etiology and impact of Treg plasticity across disease states remain incompletely understood. Better tools are thus needed to deeply characterize human Treg phenotypic heterogeneity at the single cell level to advance discovery of Treg-based biomarkers in disease and to assess the effects of Treg-directed therapeutics. To this end, our 38-parameter panel consists of a 13-marker PBMC backbone module to broadly phenotype PBMCs while specifically discriminating Tregs, and a 25-marker Treg phenotyping module to determine Treg differentiation state, activation profile, and lineage subtype. In contrast to many high-parameter OMIPs that rely on surface staining only, we incorporated several intracellular targets in this panel. This afforded the opportunity to thoroughly evaluate binding characteristics of all antibodies in both pre-fixation and post-fixation and permeabilization settings; we identify several antibodies eligible for overnight post-fixation staining that require substantially reduced titers as compared to traditional pre-fixation staining, resulting in significant cost savings. Dimensionality reduction and semi-supervised clustering on healthy donor PBMC-derived Tregs profiled by our panel reveal up to 14 discrete Treg phenotypes. In sum, this panel enables deep phenotypic characterization of human Treg heterogeneity in peripheral blood specimens by spectral flow cytometry.
期刊介绍:
Cytometry Part A, the journal of quantitative single-cell analysis, features original research reports and reviews of innovative scientific studies employing quantitative single-cell measurement, separation, manipulation, and modeling techniques, as well as original articles on mechanisms of molecular and cellular functions obtained by cytometry techniques.
The journal welcomes submissions from multiple research fields that fully embrace the study of the cytome:
Biomedical Instrumentation Engineering
Biophotonics
Bioinformatics
Cell Biology
Computational Biology
Data Science
Immunology
Parasitology
Microbiology
Neuroscience
Cancer
Stem Cells
Tissue Regeneration.