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Human umbilical cord blood cells suffer major modification by fixatives and anticoagulants

Introduction: Developing techniques for the tagless isolation of homogeneous cell populations in physiological-like conditions is of great interest in medical research. A particular case is Gravitational Field-Flow Fractionation (GrFFF), which can be run avoiding cell fixation, and that was already...

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Autores principales: Danusso, Roberta, Rosati, Riccardo, Possenti, Luca, Lombardini, Elena, Gigli, Francesca, Costantino, Maria Laura, Ferrazzi, Enrico, Casagrande, Giustina, Lattuada, Debora
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10050555/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37008002
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2023.1070474
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author Danusso, Roberta
Rosati, Riccardo
Possenti, Luca
Lombardini, Elena
Gigli, Francesca
Costantino, Maria Laura
Ferrazzi, Enrico
Casagrande, Giustina
Lattuada, Debora
author_facet Danusso, Roberta
Rosati, Riccardo
Possenti, Luca
Lombardini, Elena
Gigli, Francesca
Costantino, Maria Laura
Ferrazzi, Enrico
Casagrande, Giustina
Lattuada, Debora
author_sort Danusso, Roberta
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Developing techniques for the tagless isolation of homogeneous cell populations in physiological-like conditions is of great interest in medical research. A particular case is Gravitational Field-Flow Fractionation (GrFFF), which can be run avoiding cell fixation, and that was already used to separate viable cells. Cell dimensions have a key role in this process. However, their dimensions under physiological-like conditions are not easily known since the most diffused measurement techniques are performed on fixed cells, and the fixation used to preserve tissues can alter the cell size. This work aims to obtain and compare cell size data under physiological-like conditions and in the presence of a fixative. Methods: We developed a new protocol that allows the analysis of blood cells in different conditions. Then, we applied it to obtain a dataset of human cord blood cell dimensions from 32 subjects, comparing two tubes with anticoagulants (EDTA and Citrate) and two tubes with different preservatives (CellRescue and CellSave). We analyzed a total of 2071 cells by using confocal microscopy via bio-imaging to assess dimensions (cellular and nuclear) and morphology. Results: Cell diameter measured does not differ when using the different anticoagulants, except for the increase reported for monocyte in the presence of citrate. Instead, cell dimensions differ when comparing anticoagulants and cell preservative tubes, with a few exceptions. Cells characterized by high cytoplasm content show a reduction in their size, while morphology appears always preserved. In a subgroup of cells, 3D reconstruction was performed. Cell and nucleus volumes were estimated using different methods (specific 3D tool or reconstruction from 2D projection). Discussion: We found that some cell types benefit from a complete 3D analysis because they contain non-spherical structures (mainly for cells characterized by poly-lobated nucleus). Overall, we showed the effect of the preservatives mixture on cell dimensions. Such an effect must be considered when dealing with problems highly dependent on cell size, such as GrFFF. Additionally, such information is crucial in computational models increasingly being employed to simulate biological events.
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spelling pubmed-100505552023-03-30 Human umbilical cord blood cells suffer major modification by fixatives and anticoagulants Danusso, Roberta Rosati, Riccardo Possenti, Luca Lombardini, Elena Gigli, Francesca Costantino, Maria Laura Ferrazzi, Enrico Casagrande, Giustina Lattuada, Debora Front Physiol Physiology Introduction: Developing techniques for the tagless isolation of homogeneous cell populations in physiological-like conditions is of great interest in medical research. A particular case is Gravitational Field-Flow Fractionation (GrFFF), which can be run avoiding cell fixation, and that was already used to separate viable cells. Cell dimensions have a key role in this process. However, their dimensions under physiological-like conditions are not easily known since the most diffused measurement techniques are performed on fixed cells, and the fixation used to preserve tissues can alter the cell size. This work aims to obtain and compare cell size data under physiological-like conditions and in the presence of a fixative. Methods: We developed a new protocol that allows the analysis of blood cells in different conditions. Then, we applied it to obtain a dataset of human cord blood cell dimensions from 32 subjects, comparing two tubes with anticoagulants (EDTA and Citrate) and two tubes with different preservatives (CellRescue and CellSave). We analyzed a total of 2071 cells by using confocal microscopy via bio-imaging to assess dimensions (cellular and nuclear) and morphology. Results: Cell diameter measured does not differ when using the different anticoagulants, except for the increase reported for monocyte in the presence of citrate. Instead, cell dimensions differ when comparing anticoagulants and cell preservative tubes, with a few exceptions. Cells characterized by high cytoplasm content show a reduction in their size, while morphology appears always preserved. In a subgroup of cells, 3D reconstruction was performed. Cell and nucleus volumes were estimated using different methods (specific 3D tool or reconstruction from 2D projection). Discussion: We found that some cell types benefit from a complete 3D analysis because they contain non-spherical structures (mainly for cells characterized by poly-lobated nucleus). Overall, we showed the effect of the preservatives mixture on cell dimensions. Such an effect must be considered when dealing with problems highly dependent on cell size, such as GrFFF. Additionally, such information is crucial in computational models increasingly being employed to simulate biological events. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-03-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10050555/ /pubmed/37008002 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2023.1070474 Text en Copyright © 2023 Danusso, Rosati, Possenti, Lombardini, Gigli, Costantino, Ferrazzi, Casagrande and Lattuada. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Danusso, Roberta
Rosati, Riccardo
Possenti, Luca
Lombardini, Elena
Gigli, Francesca
Costantino, Maria Laura
Ferrazzi, Enrico
Casagrande, Giustina
Lattuada, Debora
Human umbilical cord blood cells suffer major modification by fixatives and anticoagulants
title Human umbilical cord blood cells suffer major modification by fixatives and anticoagulants
title_full Human umbilical cord blood cells suffer major modification by fixatives and anticoagulants
title_fullStr Human umbilical cord blood cells suffer major modification by fixatives and anticoagulants
title_full_unstemmed Human umbilical cord blood cells suffer major modification by fixatives and anticoagulants
title_short Human umbilical cord blood cells suffer major modification by fixatives and anticoagulants
title_sort human umbilical cord blood cells suffer major modification by fixatives and anticoagulants
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10050555/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37008002
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2023.1070474
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