CD1c-expression by monocytes - Implications for the use of commercial CD1c+ dendritic cell isolation kits

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Abstract

Conventional dendritic cells (cDCs) comprise a heterogeneous population of cells that are important regulators of immunity and homeostasis. CD1c+ cDCs are present in human blood and tissues, and found to efficiently activate naïve CD4+ T cells. While CD1c is thought to specifically identify this subset of human cDCs, we show here that also classical and intermediate monocytes express CD1c. Accordingly, the commercial CD1c (BDCA-1)+ Dendritic Cell Isolation Kit isolates two distinct cell populations from blood: CD1c+CD14− cDCs and CD1c+CD14+ monocytes. CD1c+ cDCs and CD1c+ monocytes exhibited strikingly different properties, including their differential regulation of surface marker expression, their levels of cytokine production, and their ability to stimulate naïve CD4+ T cells. These results demonstrate that a commercial CD1c (BDCA-1)+ Dendritic Cell Isolation Kit isolates two functionally different cell populations, which has important implications for the interpretation of previously generated data using this kit to characterize CD1c+ cDCs.

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Schrøder, M., Melum, G. R., Landsverk, O. J. B., Bujko, A., Yaqub, S., Gran, E., … Richter, L. (2016). CD1c-expression by monocytes - Implications for the use of commercial CD1c+ dendritic cell isolation kits. PLoS ONE, 11(6). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157387

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