Abstract

BackgroundHuman neutrophils are central players in innate immunity, a major component of inflammatory responses, and a leading model for cell motility and chemotaxis. However, primary neutrophils are short-lived, limiting their experimental usefulness in the laboratory. Thus, human myeloid cell lines have been characterized for their ability to undergo neutrophil-like differentiation in vitro. The HL-60 cell line and its PLB-985 sub-line are commonly used to model human neutrophil behavior, but how closely gene expression in differentiated cells resembles that of primary neutrophils has remained unclear.ResultsIn this study, we compared the effectiveness of differentiation protocols and used RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) to compare the transcriptomes of HL-60 and PLB-985 cells with published data for human and mouse primary neutrophils. Among commonly used differentiation protocols for neutrophil-like cell lines, addition of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) gave the best combination of cell viability and expression of markers for differentiation. However, combining DMSO with the serum-free-supplement Nutridoma resulted in increased chemotactic response, phagocytic activity, oxidative burst and cell surface expression of the neutrophil markers FPR1 and CD11b without a cost in viability. RNA-seq analysis of HL-60 and PLB-985 cells before and after differentiation showed that differentiation broadly increases the similarity in gene expression between the cell lines and primary neutrophils. Furthermore, the gene expression pattern of the differentiated cell lines correlated slightly better with that of human neutrophils than the mouse neutrophil pattern did. Finally, we created a publicly available gene expression database that is searchable by gene name and protein domain content, where users can compare gene expression in HL-60, PLB-985 and primary human and mouse neutrophils.ConclusionsOur study verifies that a DMSO-based differentiation protocol for HL-60 and PLB-985 cell lines gives superior differentiation and cell viability relative to other common protocols, and indicates that addition of Nutridoma may be preferable for studies of chemotaxis, phagocytosis, or oxidative burst. Our neutrophil gene expression database will be a valuable tool to identify similarities and differences in gene expression between the cell lines and primary neutrophils, to compare expression levels for genes of interest, and to improve the design of tools for genetic perturbations.

Highlights

  • Human neutrophils are central players in innate immunity, a major component of inflammatory responses, and a leading model for cell motility and chemotaxis

  • Our study indicates that dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO)-based differentiation achieves the best balance of neutrophil marker expression with high cell viability and function, and that the use of Nutridoma can further increase cell surface expression of at least some neutrophil markers, including the Formyl Peptide Receptor 1 (FPR1)

  • We chose CD11b (Integrin Alpha M, ITGAM) as an early marker, since it begins to appear within 3 days of differentiation with DMSO [27], and FPR1 as a late neutrophil differentiation marker since it is usually only detectable after 5 or 6 days of differentiation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Human neutrophils are central players in innate immunity, a major component of inflammatory responses, and a leading model for cell motility and chemotaxis. Neutrophils are the most abundant immune cell population circulating in the human bloodstream, representing 50–70% of all leukocytes. They are generated from myeloid precursors in the bone marrow, where they undergo several stages of maturation, namely myeloblast, promyelocyte, myelocyte, metamyelocyte, band cell and polymorphonuclear neutrophil [1]. Neutrophils are rapidly recruited to sites of inflammation, migrating up gradients of chemical cues in a process called chemotaxis. Neutrophils are among the world’s most accurate chemotaxing cells, and serve as a leading model for eukaryotic chemotaxis [2].

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call