Abstract

Basophils are granulocytes involved in parasite immunity and allergic diseases, known for their potent secretion of type 2 cytokines. Identifying their functions has proven to be controversial due to their relative rarity and their complex lineage phenotype. Here, we show that the expression of basophils lineage markers CD200R3 and FcεRIα is highly variable in inflammatory settings and hinders basophils identification by flow cytometry across multiple disease states or tissues. Fluorophore-conjugated antibody staining of these lineage markers strongly activates basophil type 2 cytokine expression, and represents a potential bias for coculture or in vivo transfer experiments. The Basoph8 is a mouse model where basophils specifically express a strong fluorescent reporter and the Cre recombinase. Basophils can be identified and FACS sorted unambiguously by their expression of the enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (eYFP) in these mice. We show that the expression of the eYFP is robust in vivo during inflammation, and in vitro on living basophils for at least 72 h, including during the induction of anaphylactoid degranulation. We bred and characterized the Basoph8xiDTR mice, in which basophils specifically express eYFP and the simian diphtheria toxin receptor (DTR). This model enables basophils conditional depletion relatively specifically ex vivo and in vivo during allergic inflammation and their detection as eYFP+ cells. In conclusion, we report underappreciated benefits of the commercially available Basoph8 mice to study basophils function.

Highlights

  • Basophils are potent blood granulocytes known to be associated with Type 2 immune responses

  • Diphtheria Toxin (DT) injections did not change the numbers of peritoneal mast cells or B cells, or mast cells from the ear skin, but we noticed a significant increase in the proportion of peritoneal macrophages after 7 days of DT injections when compared with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) injections (Figure 6C)

  • Basophils are potent circulating granulocytes that have been associated with the development of allergic or autoimmune diseases and protection against helminths

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Summary

Introduction

Basophils are potent blood granulocytes known to be associated with Type 2 immune responses. As for murine mast cells, basophils are characterized by their expression of the high affinity receptor for IgE (FcεRIα), and of CD200R3, an activating receptor of the CD200R receptor-like family [2]. Efforts to define their function using depleting monoclonal antibodies targeting basophil “lineage defining” surface antigens such as FcεRIα and CD200R3 have proven to be controversial.

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