Abstract

A quantitative transmigration system, permitting the harvest of transmigrated cells for further analysis, was used to study carp head kidney (HK) granulocyte migration in vitro. Pooled carp serum and leukotriene B4 (LTB-4), but not recombinant human C-X-C chemokine ligand 8 (rhCXCL8), recombinant human complement component 5a (rhC5a) or N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP) induced strong migration (up to 70%) of carp HK granulocytes. The transmigrated cells were viable (≥96%) and uniform (purity ≥97%). After serum- as well as LTB-4-induced transmigration granulocytes produced the same amounts of reactive oxygen species (ROS) as non-migrated cells in HK cell suspension. Their morphology, staining characteristics and flow cytometric scatter characteristics, plus their ability to produce ROS characterised the transmigrated granulocytes as neutrophils. The quantitative transmigration system described here could also serve as an excellent tool for the selective attraction and isolation of highly purified carp neutrophils from HK cell suspensions.

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