Abstract

BackgroundEndothelial progenitor cells (EPC) are markers of endothelial injury and may serve as a surrogate marker for vascular repair in interventional clinical trials. Objectives of this study were to modify a method of isolation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and enumeration of EPC and mature endothelial cells (EC) from peripheral blood and to evaluate influence of cryopreservation on viability of PBMC and on numbers of EPC and EC.Patients/MethodsEPC and EC were analyzed in healthy volunteers in freshly isolated PBMC collected in CPT (cell preparation tubes) and in PBMC cryopreserved with: 1) Gibco Recovery™ Cell Culture Freezing Medium, 2) custom freezing medium. Viability of PBMC was tested using DAPI. EPC were gated for CD45− CD34+CD133+/−VEGFR2+/− and EC were gated for CD45−CD146+CD34+/−VEGFR2+/−.ResultsCryopreservation for 7 days at −80°C decreased viable PBMC from 94 ± 0.5% (fresh) to 84 ± 4% (the custom medium) and to 69 ± 8% (Gibco medium), while cryopreservation at −65°C decreased viability to 60 ± 6% (p<0.001, the custom medium) and 49 ± 5% (p<0.001, Gibco medium). In fresh samples early EPC (CD45− CD34+CD133+VEGFR2+) were enumerated as 0.2 ± 0.06%, late EPC(CD45−CD146+CD34+VEGFR2+) as 0.6 ± 0.1% and mature EC (CD45−CD146+CD34−VEGFR2+) as 0.8 ± 0.3%of live PBMC. Cryopreservation with Gibco and the custom freezing medium at −80°C for 7 days decreased numbers EPC and EC, however, this decrease was not statistically significant.ConclusionsOur data indicate that cryopreservation at −80°C for 7 days decreases, although not significantly, viability of PBMC and numbers of subsets of EC and EPC. This method may provide an optimized approach to isolation and short-term cryopreservation of subsets of EPC and of mature EC suitable for multicenter trials.

Highlights

  • Endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) are markers of endothelial injury and may serve as a surrogate marker for vascular repair in interventional clinical trials

  • Our data indicate that cryopreservation at -80°C for 7 days decreases, not significantly, viability of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and numbers of subsets of endothelial cells (EC) and endothelial progenitor cells (EPC)

  • And late EPC and EC subsets were enumerated from blood samples immediately after venipuncture followed by isolation, staining and subsequent fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis of PBMC (n=8)

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Summary

Introduction

Endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) are markers of endothelial injury and may serve as a surrogate marker for vascular repair in interventional clinical trials. Objectives of this study were to modify a method of isolation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and enumeration of EPC and mature endothelial cells (EC) from peripheral blood and to evaluate influence of cryopreservation on viability of PBMC and on numbers of EPC and EC. Emerging evidence indicates that endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) may improve function of injured and ischemic organs by both induction and modulation of vasculogenesis [1,2]. Recent clinical trials show that transplantation of EPC may enhance myocardial angiogenesis [11], lead to functional improvement in peripheral vascular injury [2], and produce beneficial effects after brain ischemia (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00535197, NCT01468064). Since circulating EPC can be augmented through a variety of pharmacologic interventions, they represent an attractive therapeutic target that may contribute to diminishing the size of TBI and to functional improvement, and EPC may serve as a surrogate marker of outcomes [14,15,16]

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