T lymphocyte density and distribution in human colorectal mucosa, and inefficiency of current cell isolation protocols

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Abstract

Mucosal tissues are critical immune effector sites containing complex populations of leukocytes in a tissue microenvironment that remains incompletely understood. We identify and quantify in human distal colorectal tissue absolute mucosal CD3 + lymphocytes, including CD4 + and CD8 + subsets, by direct visualization using immunohistochemistry (IHC), immunofluorescence (IF), and an automated counting protocol (r 2 =0.90). Sigmoid and rectal mucosal tissues are both densely packed with T lymphocytes in the mucosal compartment. Both compartments had similar densities of CD3 + T lymphocytes with 37,400 ± 2,801 cells/mm 3 and 33,700 ± 4,324 cell/mm 3, respectively. Sigmoid mucosa contained 57% CD3 + CD4 + and 40% CD3 + CD8 + T lymphocytes which calculates to 21,300 ± 1,476/mm 3 and 15,000 ± 275/mm 3 T lymphocytes, respectively. Rectal mucosa had 57% CD3 + CD4 + and 42% CD3 + CD8 + or 21,577 ± 332, and 17,090 ± 1,206 cells/mm 3, respectively. By comparison, sigmoid mucosal biopsies subjected to conventional collagenase digestion, mononuclear cell (MMC) isolation and staining for flow cytometry yielded 4,549 ± 381/mm 3 and 2,708 ± 245/mm 3 CD4 + and CD8 + T lymphocytes. These data suggest only ∼20.7% recovery compared to IHC results for these markers. Further studies will determine if this reflects a selective bias in only CD3 +, CD4 + and CD8 + T cells or can be generalized to all flow-analyzed cells from mucosal tissues for phenotyping and functional testing.

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Preza, G. C., Yang, O. O., Elliott, J., Anton, P. A., & Ochoa, M. T. (2015). T lymphocyte density and distribution in human colorectal mucosa, and inefficiency of current cell isolation protocols. PLoS ONE, 10(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0122723

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