Author:
Rönnberg Elin,Boey Daryl Zhong Hao,Ravindran Avinash,Säfholm Jesper,Orre Ann-Charlotte,Al-Ameri Mamdoh,Adner Mikael,Dahlén Sven-Erik,Dahlin Joakim S.,Nilsson Gunnar
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundImmunohistochemical analysis of granule-associated proteases have revealed that human lungs mast cells constitute a heterogeneous population of cells, with distinct subpopulations identified. However, a systematic and comprehensive analysis of cell surface markers to study human lung mast cell heterogeneity is yet to be performed.MethodsHuman lung mast cells were obtained from lung lobectomies and the expression of 332 cell surface markers were analyzed using flow cytometry and the LEGENDScreen™ kit. Markers that exhibited a high variance were selected for additional analyses to reveal whether they correlated and if discrete mast cell subpopulations were discernable.ResultsWe identified expression of 102 surface markers on human lung mast cells. Several markers showed a high continuous variation of expression within the mast cell population. Six of these markers correlated: SUSD2, CD49a, CD326, CD34, CD66 and HLA-DR. The expression of these markers also correlated to the size and granularity of the mast cells. However, no marker produced an expression profile consistent with a bi- or multimodal distribution.ConclusionsLEGENDScreen analysis identified more than 100 cell surface markers on mast cells, out of which 23 have to our knowledge not previously described on human mast cells. Several of the newly described markers are known to be involved in sensing the microenvironment, and their identification can shed new light on mast cell functions. The exhaustive expression profiling of the 332 surface markers failed to detect distinct mast cell subpopulations. Instead, we demonstrate a continuous nature of human lung mast cell heterogeneity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory