Seu Katie Giger, Papoin Julien, Fessler Rose, Hom Jimmy, Huang Gang, Mohandas Narla, Blanc Lionel, Kalfa Theodosia A
Cancer and Blood Diseases Institute, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH, United States.
Laboratory of Developmental Erythropoiesis, Center for Autoimmune and Musculoskeletal Diseases, The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, Manhasset, NY, United States.
Front Immunol. 2017 Sep 20;8:1140. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01140. eCollection 2017.
Mammalian erythropoiesis occurs within erythroblastic islands (EBIs), niches where maturing erythroblasts interact closely with a central macrophage. While it is generally accepted that EBI macrophages play an important role in erythropoiesis, thorough investigation of the mechanisms by which they support erythropoiesis is limited largely by inability to identify and isolate the specific macrophage sub-population that constitute the EBI. Early studies utilized immunohistochemistry or immunofluorescence to study EBI morphology and structure, while more recent efforts have used flow cytometry for high-throughput quantitative characterization of EBIs and their central macrophages. However, these approaches based on the expectation that EBI macrophages are a homogeneous population (F4/80/CD169/VCAM-1 for example) provide an incomplete picture and potentially overlook critical information about the nature and biology of the islands and their central macrophages. Here, we present a novel method for analysis of EBI macrophages from hematopoietic tissues of mice and rats using multispectral imaging flow cytometry (IFC), which combines the high-throughput advantage of flow cytometry with the morphological and fluorescence features derived from microscopy. This method provides both quantitative analysis of EBIs, as well as structural and morphological details of the central macrophages and associated cells. Importantly, the images, combined with quantitative software features, can be used to evaluate co-expression of phenotypic markers which is crucial since some antigens used to identify macrophages (e.g., F4/80 and CD11b) can be expressed on non-erythroid cells associated with the islands instead of, or in addition to the central macrophage itself. We have used this method to analyze native EBIs from different hematopoietic tissues and evaluated the expression of several markers that have been previously reported to be expressed on EBI macrophages. We found that VCAM-1, F4/80, and CD169 are expressed heterogeneously by the central macrophages within the EBIs, while CD11b, although abundantly expressed by cells within the islands, is not expressed on the EBI macrophages. Moreover, differences in the phenotype of EBIs in rats compared to mice point to potential functional differences between these species. These data demonstrate the usefulness of IFC in analysis and characterization of EBIs and more importantly in exploring the heterogeneity and plasticity of EBI macrophages.
哺乳动物的红细胞生成发生在成红细胞岛(EBIs)中,成红细胞岛是成熟的成红细胞与中央巨噬细胞紧密相互作用的微环境。虽然人们普遍认为EBI巨噬细胞在红细胞生成中起重要作用,但对它们支持红细胞生成机制的深入研究在很大程度上受到限制,因为无法识别和分离构成EBI的特定巨噬细胞亚群。早期研究利用免疫组织化学或免疫荧光来研究EBI的形态和结构,而最近的研究则使用流式细胞术对EBI及其中央巨噬细胞进行高通量定量表征。然而,这些基于EBI巨噬细胞是同质群体(例如F4/80/CD169/VCAM-1)这一预期的方法提供的信息不完整,可能会忽略有关这些岛屿及其中央巨噬细胞的性质和生物学的关键信息。在这里,我们提出了一种使用多光谱成像流式细胞术(IFC)分析小鼠和大鼠造血组织中EBI巨噬细胞的新方法,该方法将流式细胞术的高通量优势与显微镜衍生的形态和荧光特征相结合。这种方法既可以对EBI进行定量分析,也可以提供中央巨噬细胞和相关细胞的结构及形态细节。重要的是,这些图像结合定量软件功能,可用于评估表型标记的共表达,这至关重要,因为一些用于识别巨噬细胞的抗原(例如F4/80和CD11b)可能在与这些岛屿相关的非红细胞上表达,而不是在中央巨噬细胞本身上表达,或者除了中央巨噬细胞本身之外还在这些非红细胞上表达。我们使用这种方法分析了来自不同造血组织的天然EBI,并评估了几种先前报道在EBI巨噬细胞上表达的标记物的表达情况。我们发现,VCAM-1、F4/80和CD169在EBI内的中央巨噬细胞中呈异质性表达,而CD11b虽然在岛屿内的细胞中大量表达,但在EBI巨噬细胞上不表达。此外,与小鼠相比,大鼠EBI表型的差异表明这些物种之间可能存在功能差异。这些数据证明了IFC在分析和表征EBI方面的有用性,更重要的是在探索EBI巨噬细胞的异质性和可塑性方面的有用性。