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Phenotypic analysis of circulating dendritic cells during the second half of human gestation

Phenotypic analysis of circulating dendritic cells during the second half of human gestation
Phenotypic analysis of circulating dendritic cells during the second half of human gestation
Dendritic cells (DCs) have been characterized as having an immature phenotype in infants when compared with adults; but it is unclear whether the phenotype or function of these populations changes during human intrauterine development. Three-colour flow cytometry was used to phenotype fetal/neonatal circulating DCs during the second half (>20-wk gestation) of pregnancy, (n = 34) and adults (n = 9). DCs were identified from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) or cord blood mononuclear cells (CBMCs) as staining brightly for HLA-DR but negative for T cell, B cell, monocyte, and NK cell lineage markers. The surface molecule of interest was detected in a third colour. During gestation CD34, a marker of immaturity was significantly higher, and CD4, a differentiation marker, was significantly lower than adult levels. The percentage of CD11c+ cells did not differ significantly at any age, although a trend to reduced intensity of expression at earlier stages of gestation was observed. Significantly fewer DCs expressed the IgG receptors CD32 and CD64 at all gestations. The percentage of HLA-DR+/lin- cells expressing CD40 was lowest at 20-23 wks and was always significantly lower on DCs from cord blood vs. adult blood. Similarly, the percentage of CD86+ and CD54+ DCs was significantly lower than adults throughout gestation. Thus, immaturity of cord blood DCs is likely to arise as a consequence of decreased ability to take up antigen (at least via IgG-mediated mechanisms) and reduced provision of co-stimulation
dendritic cell, phenotype, gestation, neonate, human
0905-6157
119-125
Holloway, Judith A.
f22f45f3-6fc8-4a4c-bc6c-24add507037c
Thornton, Catherine A.
cff89e57-48ce-4457-93ed-8a2ba8a999cb
Diaper, Norma D.
133a4395-dfd0-4119-81d8-11ed01886184
Howe, David T.
2aff7e22-c75f-4d98-b8af-fe3e1a3d2dcb
Warner, John O.
50630e99-8486-4859-ade3-cd2c79c5a153
Holloway, Judith A.
f22f45f3-6fc8-4a4c-bc6c-24add507037c
Thornton, Catherine A.
cff89e57-48ce-4457-93ed-8a2ba8a999cb
Diaper, Norma D.
133a4395-dfd0-4119-81d8-11ed01886184
Howe, David T.
2aff7e22-c75f-4d98-b8af-fe3e1a3d2dcb
Warner, John O.
50630e99-8486-4859-ade3-cd2c79c5a153

Holloway, Judith A., Thornton, Catherine A., Diaper, Norma D., Howe, David T. and Warner, John O. (2008) Phenotypic analysis of circulating dendritic cells during the second half of human gestation. Pediatric Allergy and Immunology, 20 (2), 119-125. (doi:10.1111/j.1399-3038.2008.00771.x). (PMID:18798798)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Dendritic cells (DCs) have been characterized as having an immature phenotype in infants when compared with adults; but it is unclear whether the phenotype or function of these populations changes during human intrauterine development. Three-colour flow cytometry was used to phenotype fetal/neonatal circulating DCs during the second half (>20-wk gestation) of pregnancy, (n = 34) and adults (n = 9). DCs were identified from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) or cord blood mononuclear cells (CBMCs) as staining brightly for HLA-DR but negative for T cell, B cell, monocyte, and NK cell lineage markers. The surface molecule of interest was detected in a third colour. During gestation CD34, a marker of immaturity was significantly higher, and CD4, a differentiation marker, was significantly lower than adult levels. The percentage of CD11c+ cells did not differ significantly at any age, although a trend to reduced intensity of expression at earlier stages of gestation was observed. Significantly fewer DCs expressed the IgG receptors CD32 and CD64 at all gestations. The percentage of HLA-DR+/lin- cells expressing CD40 was lowest at 20-23 wks and was always significantly lower on DCs from cord blood vs. adult blood. Similarly, the percentage of CD86+ and CD54+ DCs was significantly lower than adults throughout gestation. Thus, immaturity of cord blood DCs is likely to arise as a consequence of decreased ability to take up antigen (at least via IgG-mediated mechanisms) and reduced provision of co-stimulation

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More information

Published date: 15 September 2008
Keywords: dendritic cell, phenotype, gestation, neonate, human
Organisations: Medicine

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 70835
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/70835
ISSN: 0905-6157
PURE UUID: 775e8c2b-b927-483f-8792-a4db6b12e27d
ORCID for Judith A. Holloway: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2268-3071

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:44

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Contributors

Author: Catherine A. Thornton
Author: Norma D. Diaper
Author: David T. Howe
Author: John O. Warner

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