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Comprehensive assessment of chemokine expression profiles by flow cytometry
Jens Eberlein, … , Hugo R. Rosen, Dirk Homann
Jens Eberlein, … , Hugo R. Rosen, Dirk Homann
Published February 8, 2010
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2010;120(3):907-923. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI40645.
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Technical Advance Immunology

Comprehensive assessment of chemokine expression profiles by flow cytometry

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Abstract

The chemokines are a large family of mainly secreted molecules involved in the regulation of numerous physiological and pathophysiological processes. Despite many years of investigation, the precise cellular sources of most chemokines have remained incompletely defined as a consequence of the limited availability of suitable reagents to visualize the expression of chemokine proteins at the single-cell level. Here, we developed a simple flow cytometry–based assay using commercially available chemokine-specific antibodies for efficient cell-associated detection of 37 of 39 murine chemokines. To demonstrate the utility of this methodology, we used it to reevaluate the nature of homeostatic chemokines in the hematopoietic compartment, to delineate the complete chemokine profiles of NK cells and B cells in response to major polyclonal stimuli, and to assess the chemokine response of DCs to bacterial infection. The versatility of this analytical methodology was further demonstrated by its application to selected human chemokines and should greatly facilitate any future investigation into chemokine biology at large.

Authors

Jens Eberlein, Tom T. Nguyen, Francisco Victorino, Lucy Golden-Mason, Hugo R. Rosen, Dirk Homann

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Figure 2

Visualization and identification of homeostatic chemokines in splenic hematopoietic cells.

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Visualization and identification of homeostatic chemokines in splenic he...
(A and B) Spleen cells obtained from naive B6 mice (or, for CXCL11 analyses, from Balb/c mice) were analyzed for chemokine expression directly ex vivo (constitutive) or after a 5-hour culture in the presence of BFA but absent any exogenous stimuli (spontaneous) as detailed in Methods. All plots are gated on “live” cells, as determined by forward/side scatter properties. Red circles denote chemokine-positive staining in the respective quadrants. (A) CC family. (B) CXC, CX3C, and C families. Note that our analyses of CXCL14 expression with a preconjugated anti-hCXCL14 mAb (clone 131120) were associated with nonspecific staining of a CD11b++ cell subset (identical staining pattern observed with a preconjugated mIgG2a isotype control; not shown). Data are compiled from multiple independent experiments (n = 2–3 mice), with individual chemokine stains repeated at least twice.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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