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Monocyte isolation techniques significantly impact the phenotype of both isolated monocytes and derived macrophages in vitro
Author(s) -
Nielsen Marlene C.,
Andersen Morten N.,
Møller Holger J.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.297
H-Index - 133
eISSN - 1365-2567
pISSN - 0019-2805
DOI - 10.1111/imm.13125
Subject(s) - cd163 , cd14 , monocyte , peripheral blood mononuclear cell , adhesion , macrophage , phenotype , in vitro , biology , cd80 , immunology , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , flow cytometry , biochemistry , cd40 , cytotoxic t cell , gene , organic chemistry
Summary Monocyte‐derived macrophages (MDMs) generated from peripheral blood monocytes are widely used to model human macrophages for in vitro studies. However, the possible impact of different isolation methods on the resulting MDM phenotype is poorly described. We aimed to investigate the effects of three commonly used monocyte isolation techniques on the resulting MDM phenotype. Plastic adhesion, negative selection, and CD14 pos selection were compared. Monocyte‐derived macrophages were generated by 5‐day culture with macrophage and granulocyte–macrophage colony‐stimulating factors. We investigated monocyte and MDM yields, purity, viability, and cell phenotype. CD14 pos selection resulted in highest monocyte yield (19·8 × 10 6 cells, equivalent to 70% of total) and purity (98·7%), compared with negative selection (17·7 × 10 6 cells, 61% of total, 85·0% purity), and plastic adhesion (6·1 × 10 6 cells, 12·9% of total, 44·2% purity). Negatively selected monocytes were highly contaminated with platelets. Expression of CD163 and CD14 were significantly lower on CD14 pos selection and plastic adhesion monocytes, compared with untouched peripheral blood mononuclear cells. After maturation, CD14 pos selection also resulted in the highest MDM purity (98·2%) compared with negative selection (94·5%) and plastic adhesion (66·1%). Furthermore, MDMs from plastic adhesion were M1‐skewed (CD80 high HLA‐DR high CD163 low ), whereas negative selection MDMs were M2‐skewed (CD80 low HLA‐DR low CD163 high ). Choice of monocyte isolation method not only significantly affects yield and purity, but also impacts resulting phenotype of cultured MDMs. These differences may partly be explained by the presence of contaminating cells when using plastic adherence or negative selection. Careful considerations of monocyte isolation methods are important for designing in vitro assays on MDMs.