Bowles Robert, Patil Sonali, Pincas Hanna, Sealfon Stuart C
Center for Translational Systems Biology and Department of Neurology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, USA.
J Vis Exp. 2011 Jul 8(53):e2766. doi: 10.3791/2766.
Dendritic cells (DCs) can be considered sentinels of the immune system which play a critical role in its initiation and response to infection. Detection of pathogenic antigen by naïve DCs is through pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) which are able to recognize specific conserved structures referred to as pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPS). Detection of PAMPs by DCs triggers an intracellular signaling cascade resulting in their activation and transformation to mature DCs. This process is typically characterized by production of type 1 interferon along with other proinflammatory cytokines, upregulation of cell surface markers such as MHCII and CD86 and migration of the mature DC to draining lymph nodes, where interaction with T cells initiates the adaptive immune response. Thus, DCs link the innate and adaptive immune systems. The ability to dissect the molecular networks underlying DC response to various pathogens is crucial to a better understanding of the regulation of these signaling pathways and their induced genes. It should also help facilitate the development of DC-based vaccines against infectious diseases and tumors. However, this line of research has been severely impeded by the difficulty of transfecting primary DCs. Virus transduction methods, such as the lentiviral system, are typically used, but carry many limitations such as complexity and bio-hazardous risk (with the associated costs). Additionally, the delivery of viral gene products increases the immunogenicity of those transduced DCs. Electroporation has been used with mixed results, but we are the first to report the use of a high-throughput transfection protocol and conclusively demonstrate its utility. In this report we summarize an optimized commercial protocol for high-throughput transfection of human primary DCs, with limited cell toxicity and an absence of DC maturation. Transfection efficiency (of GFP plasmid) and cell viability were more than 50% and 70% respectively. FACS analysis established the absence of increase in expression of the maturation markers CD86 and MHCII in transfected cells, while qRT-PCR demonstrated no upregulation of IFNβ. Using this electroporation protocol, we provide evidence for successful transfection of DCs with siRNA and effective knock down of targeted gene RIG-I, a key viral recognition receptor, at both the mRNA and protein levels.
树突状细胞(DCs)可被视为免疫系统的哨兵,在免疫系统对感染的启动和反应中发挥关键作用。幼稚DCs通过模式识别受体(PRRs)检测病原性抗原,这些受体能够识别被称为病原体相关分子模式(PAMPs)的特定保守结构。DCs对PAMPs的检测触发细胞内信号级联反应,导致其激活并转化为成熟DCs。这个过程的典型特征是产生1型干扰素以及其他促炎细胞因子,上调细胞表面标志物如MHCII和CD86,并使成熟DC迁移至引流淋巴结,在那里与T细胞的相互作用启动适应性免疫反应。因此,DCs连接了固有免疫系统和适应性免疫系统。剖析DC对各种病原体反应背后的分子网络的能力,对于更好地理解这些信号通路及其诱导基因的调控至关重要。这也应该有助于促进基于DC的针对传染病和肿瘤的疫苗的开发。然而,这条研究路线因原代DCs转染困难而受到严重阻碍。通常使用病毒转导方法,如慢病毒系统,但存在许多局限性,如复杂性和生物危害风险(以及相关成本)。此外,病毒基因产物的递送增加了那些转导DCs的免疫原性。电穿孔的使用结果不一,但我们是第一个报告使用高通量转染方案并最终证明其效用的。在本报告中,我们总结了一种优化的商业方案,用于人原代DCs的高通量转染,细胞毒性有限且DC不发生成熟。(绿色荧光蛋白质粒的)转染效率和细胞活力分别超过50%和70%。流式细胞术分析确定转染细胞中成熟标志物CD86和MHCII的表达没有增加,而定量逆转录聚合酶链反应表明IFNβ没有上调。使用这种电穿孔方案,我们提供了证据,证明DCs成功转染了小干扰RNA,并在mRNA和蛋白质水平上有效敲低了靶向基因RIG-I(一种关键的病毒识别受体)。