Polonsky Michal, Chain Benjamin, Friedman Nir
Department of Immunology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel.
Division of Infection and Immunity, UCL, London, UK.
Immunol Cell Biol. 2016 Mar;94(3):242-9. doi: 10.1038/icb.2015.104. Epub 2015 Dec 22.
Clonal expansion of lymphocytes is a hallmark of vertebrate adaptive immunity. A small number of precursor cells that recognize a specific antigen proliferate into expanded clones, differentiate and acquire various effector and memory phenotypes, which promote effective immune responses. Recent studies establish a large degree of heterogeneity in the level of expansion and in cell state between and within expanding clones. Studying these processes in vivo, while providing insightful information on the level of heterogeneity, is challenging due to the complex microenvironment and the inability to continuously track individual cells over extended periods of time. Live cell imaging of ex vivo cultures within micro fabricated arrays provides an attractive methodology for studying clonal expansion. These experiments facilitate continuous acquisition of a large number of parameters on cell number, proliferation, death and differentiation state, with single-cell resolution on thousands of expanding clones that grow within controlled environments. Such data can reveal stochastic and instructive mechanisms that contribute to observed heterogeneity and elucidate the sequential order of differentiation events. Intercellular interactions can also be studied within these arrays by following responses of a controlled number of interacting cells, all trapped within the same microwell. Here we describe implementations of live-cell imaging within microwell arrays for studies of lymphocyte clonal expansion, portray insights already gained from these experiments and outline directions for future research. These tools, together with in vivo experiments tracking single-cell responses, will expand our understanding of adaptive immunity and the ways by which it can be manipulated.
淋巴细胞的克隆性扩增是脊椎动物适应性免疫的一个标志。少数识别特定抗原的前体细胞增殖形成扩增的克隆,分化并获得各种效应和记忆表型,从而促进有效的免疫反应。最近的研究表明,在扩增克隆之间以及克隆内部,扩增水平和细胞状态存在很大程度的异质性。在体内研究这些过程,虽然能提供有关异质性水平的深刻见解,但由于微环境复杂且无法长时间连续追踪单个细胞,所以具有挑战性。微制造阵列中离体培养物的活细胞成像为研究克隆性扩增提供了一种有吸引力的方法。这些实验有助于以单细胞分辨率连续获取大量关于细胞数量、增殖、死亡和分化状态的参数,这些参数来自于在受控环境中生长的数千个扩增克隆。这样的数据可以揭示导致观察到的异质性的随机和指导性机制,并阐明分化事件的顺序。通过追踪被困在同一微孔中的受控数量的相互作用细胞的反应,也可以在这些阵列中研究细胞间相互作用。在这里,我们描述了微孔阵列中活细胞成像在淋巴细胞克隆性扩增研究中的应用,阐述了从这些实验中已经获得的见解,并概述了未来研究的方向。这些工具,连同追踪单细胞反应的体内实验,将扩展我们对适应性免疫及其调控方式的理解。