Impact of enzymatic digestion on single cell suspension yield from peripheral human lung tissue

Author:

Bondonese Anna1,Craig Andrew1,Fan Li1,Valenzi Eleanor1,Bain William1,Lafyatis Robert1,Sembrat John1,Chen Kong1,Snyder Mark E.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

2. Department of Immunology University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

3. Starzl Transplantation Institute Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractAn increasing number of translational investigations of lung biology rely on analyzing single cell suspensions obtained from human lungs. To obtain these single cell suspensions, human lungs from biopsies or research‐consented organ donors must be subjected to mechanical and enzymatic digestion prior to analysis with either flow cytometry or single cell RNA sequencing. A variety of enzymes have been used to perform tissue digestion, each with potential limitations. To better understand the limitations of each enzymatic digestion protocol and to establish a framework for comparing studies across protocols, we performed five commonly published protocols in parallel from identical samples obtained from 6 human lungs. Following mechanical (gentleMACS™) and enzymatic digestion, we quantified cell count and viability using a Nexcelom Cellometer and determined cell phenotype using multiparameter spectral flow cytometry (Cytek™ Aurora). We found that all protocols were superior in cellular yield and viability when compared to mechanical digestion alone. Protocols high in dispase cleaved immune markers CD4, CD8, CD69, and CD103 and contributed to an increased monocyte to macrophage yield. Similarly, dispase led to a differential epithelial cell yield, with increased TSPN8+ and ITGA6+ epithelial cells and reduced CD66e+ cells. When compared to collagenase D, collagenase P protocols yielded increased AT1 and AT2 cells and decreased endothelial cells. These results provide a framework for selecting an enzymatic digestion protocol best suited to the scientific question and allow for comparison of studies using different protocols.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Histology,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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