Optimized flow cytometry protocol for dihydrorhodamine 123-based detection of reactive oxygen species in leukocyte subpopulations in whole blood.

J Immunol Methods

Division of Inflammation and Infection, Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, Linköping University, Sweden. Electronic address:

Published: August 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are crucial for immune defense against infections but can also contribute to inflammation and disease progression.
  • A new whole blood assay using just 100 μL of blood combines a ROS probe and cell surface staining to simultaneously detect ROS in various immune cell subsets via flow cytometry.
  • The study found that neutrophils had the strongest ROS response to different stimuli, which could help researchers better understand immune responses in specific patient groups and evaluate potential treatments.

Article Abstract

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the ability of immune cells to mount an oxidative burst represent an important defense during microbial invasion, but is also recognized for playing a significant role in the progression of inflammatory disorders and disease. Although neutrophils produce the strongest ROS-response, other leukocytes and their cell subsets could play a significant role. Isolation of specific cells for determining their ROS-response can affect their functionality and is laborious or hard to replicate in different settings. We have therefore established a whole blood assay, that only requires 100 μL heparinized blood and utilizes the dihydrorhodamine (DHR) 123 ROS-probe combined with cell surface antibody staining for the specific detection of ROS in several subsets of cells simultaneously using flow cytometry. Although the flow markers chosen are interchangeable with other direct conjugated and cell specific antibodies depending on the research question, we focused on neutrophils (SSCCD16HLA-DR), eosinophils (SSCCD16HLA-DRCD193CD125) and monocyte subsets (SSCHLA-DRCD14CD16). As a RBC-lysis reagent we compared BD FACS Lysis Solution to the in-house prepared ammonium-chloride‑potassium based ACK Lysis Buffer, that does not fix or permeabilize the immune cells. We find that ACK-lysis of stimulated and stained samples results in superior surface staining, decreased loss of cell subsets, and enhanced resolution of the DHR-signal. Compared to the other cells analyzed in healthy blood donors, neutrophils responded with the highest ROS-response to all tested stimuli (fMLP (low stimuli), E. coli, and PMA (high stimuli)), where eosinophils and the three monocyte subsets also showed an extensive ROS-response when stimulated with E. coli or PMA. Our assay provides the possibility for researchers to examine the ROS-response of specific cell subsets in specific patient groups ex vivo and could also allow the analysis of pharmacological intervention studies targeting ROS, which ultimately can advance the field of immunological research.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jim.2022.113308DOI Listing

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