Optimization of Tissue Digestion Methods for Characterization of Photoaged Skin by Single Cell RNA Sequencing Reveals Preferential Enrichment of T Cell Subsets

Author:

Clister Terri1ORCID,Fey Rosalyn M.1ORCID,Garrison Zachary R.1ORCID,Valenzuela Cristian D.2ORCID,Bar Anna1,Leitenberger Justin J.1,Kulkarni Rajan P.1345ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dermatology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA

2. Department of Surgery, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA

3. Cancer Early Detection Advanced Research Center (CEDAR), Portland, OR 97239, USA

4. Knight Cancer Institute, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA

5. Operative Care Division, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Portland Health Care System, Portland, OR 97239, USA

Abstract

Healthy human skin tissue is often used as a control for comparison to diseased skin in patients with skin pathologies, including skin cancers or other inflammatory conditions such as atopic dermatitis or psoriasis. Although non-affected skin from these patients is a more appropriate choice for comparison, there is a paucity of studies examining such tissue. This lack is exacerbated by the difficulty of processing skin tissue for experimental analysis. In addition, choosing a processing protocol for skin tissue which preserves cell viability and identity while sufficiently dissociating cells for single-cell analysis is not a trivial task. Here, we compare three digestion methods for human skin tissue, evaluating the cell yield and viability for each protocol. We find that the use of a sequential dissociation method with multiple enzymatic digestion steps produces the highest cell viability. Using single-cell sequencing, we show this method results in a relative increase in the proportion of non-antigen-presenting mast cells and CD8 T cells as well as a relative decrease in the proportion of antigen-presenting mast cells and KYNU+ CD4 T cells. Overall, our findings support the use of this sequential digestion method on freshly processed human skin samples for optimal cell yield and viability.

Funder

The American Cancer Society

The Department of Defense

The Kuni Foundation, Discovery Grants for Cancer Research

The OHSU Physician-Scientist Program

OHSU Cancer Early Detection Advanced Research Center

ACED alliance

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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