Cargando…

Unveiling Interindividual Variability of Human Fibroblast Innate Immune Response Using Robust Cell-Based Protocols

The LabEx Milieu Interieur (MI) project is a clinical study centered on the detailed characterization of the baseline and induced immune responses in blood samples from 1,000 healthy donors. Analyses of these samples has lay ground for seminal studies on the genetic and environmental determinants of...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chansard, Audrey, Dubrulle, Nelly, Poujol de Molliens, Mathilde, Falanga, Pierre B., Stephen, Tharshana, Hasan, Milena, van Zandbergen, Ger, Aulner, Nathalie, Shorte, Spencer L., David-Watine, Brigitte
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7829859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33505391
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.569331
_version_ 1783641267908902912
author Chansard, Audrey
Dubrulle, Nelly
Poujol de Molliens, Mathilde
Falanga, Pierre B.
Stephen, Tharshana
Hasan, Milena
van Zandbergen, Ger
Aulner, Nathalie
Shorte, Spencer L.
David-Watine, Brigitte
author_facet Chansard, Audrey
Dubrulle, Nelly
Poujol de Molliens, Mathilde
Falanga, Pierre B.
Stephen, Tharshana
Hasan, Milena
van Zandbergen, Ger
Aulner, Nathalie
Shorte, Spencer L.
David-Watine, Brigitte
author_sort Chansard, Audrey
collection PubMed
description The LabEx Milieu Interieur (MI) project is a clinical study centered on the detailed characterization of the baseline and induced immune responses in blood samples from 1,000 healthy donors. Analyses of these samples has lay ground for seminal studies on the genetic and environmental determinants of immunologic variance in a healthy cohort population. In the current study we developed in vitro methods enabling standardized quantification of MI-cohort-derived primary fibroblasts responses. Our results show that in vitro human donor cohort fibroblast responses to stimulation by different MAMPs analogs allows to characterize individual donor immune-phenotype variability. The results provide proof-of-concept foundation to a new experimental framework for such studies. A bio-bank of primary fibroblast lines was generated from 323 out of 1,000 healthy individuals selected from the MI-study cohort. To study inter-donor variability of innate immune response in primary human dermal fibroblasts we chose to measure the TLR3 and TLR4 response pathways, both receptors being expressed and previously studied in fibroblasts. We established high-throughput automation compatible methods for standardized primary fibroblast cell activation, using purified MAMPS analogs, poly I:C and LPS that stimulate TLR3 and TLR4 pathways respectively. These results were in turn compared with a stimulation method using infection by HSV-1 virus. Our “Add-only” protocol minimizes high-throughput automation system variability facilitating whole process automation from cell plating through stimulation to recovery of cell supernatants, and fluorescent labeling. Images were acquired automatically by high-throughput acquisition on an automated high-content imaging microscope. Under these methodological conditions standardized image acquisition provided for quantification of cellular responses allowing biological variability to be measured with low system noise and high biological signal fidelity. Optimal for automated analysis of immuno-phenotype of primary human cell responses our method and experimental framework as reported here is highly compatible to high-throughput screening protocols like those necessary for chemo-genomic screening. In context of primary fibroblasts derived from donors enrolled to the MI-clinical-study our results open the way to assert the utility of studying immune-phenotype characteristics relevant to a human clinical cohort.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7829859
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-78298592021-01-26 Unveiling Interindividual Variability of Human Fibroblast Innate Immune Response Using Robust Cell-Based Protocols Chansard, Audrey Dubrulle, Nelly Poujol de Molliens, Mathilde Falanga, Pierre B. Stephen, Tharshana Hasan, Milena van Zandbergen, Ger Aulner, Nathalie Shorte, Spencer L. David-Watine, Brigitte Front Immunol Immunology The LabEx Milieu Interieur (MI) project is a clinical study centered on the detailed characterization of the baseline and induced immune responses in blood samples from 1,000 healthy donors. Analyses of these samples has lay ground for seminal studies on the genetic and environmental determinants of immunologic variance in a healthy cohort population. In the current study we developed in vitro methods enabling standardized quantification of MI-cohort-derived primary fibroblasts responses. Our results show that in vitro human donor cohort fibroblast responses to stimulation by different MAMPs analogs allows to characterize individual donor immune-phenotype variability. The results provide proof-of-concept foundation to a new experimental framework for such studies. A bio-bank of primary fibroblast lines was generated from 323 out of 1,000 healthy individuals selected from the MI-study cohort. To study inter-donor variability of innate immune response in primary human dermal fibroblasts we chose to measure the TLR3 and TLR4 response pathways, both receptors being expressed and previously studied in fibroblasts. We established high-throughput automation compatible methods for standardized primary fibroblast cell activation, using purified MAMPS analogs, poly I:C and LPS that stimulate TLR3 and TLR4 pathways respectively. These results were in turn compared with a stimulation method using infection by HSV-1 virus. Our “Add-only” protocol minimizes high-throughput automation system variability facilitating whole process automation from cell plating through stimulation to recovery of cell supernatants, and fluorescent labeling. Images were acquired automatically by high-throughput acquisition on an automated high-content imaging microscope. Under these methodological conditions standardized image acquisition provided for quantification of cellular responses allowing biological variability to be measured with low system noise and high biological signal fidelity. Optimal for automated analysis of immuno-phenotype of primary human cell responses our method and experimental framework as reported here is highly compatible to high-throughput screening protocols like those necessary for chemo-genomic screening. In context of primary fibroblasts derived from donors enrolled to the MI-clinical-study our results open the way to assert the utility of studying immune-phenotype characteristics relevant to a human clinical cohort. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-01-11 /pmc/articles/PMC7829859/ /pubmed/33505391 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.569331 Text en Copyright © 2021 Chansard, Dubrulle, Poujol de Molliens, Falanga, Stephen, Hasan, van Zandbergen, Aulner, Shorte, David-Watine and the Milieu Intérieur Consortium 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 Immunology
Chansard, Audrey
Dubrulle, Nelly
Poujol de Molliens, Mathilde
Falanga, Pierre B.
Stephen, Tharshana
Hasan, Milena
van Zandbergen, Ger
Aulner, Nathalie
Shorte, Spencer L.
David-Watine, Brigitte
Unveiling Interindividual Variability of Human Fibroblast Innate Immune Response Using Robust Cell-Based Protocols
title Unveiling Interindividual Variability of Human Fibroblast Innate Immune Response Using Robust Cell-Based Protocols
title_full Unveiling Interindividual Variability of Human Fibroblast Innate Immune Response Using Robust Cell-Based Protocols
title_fullStr Unveiling Interindividual Variability of Human Fibroblast Innate Immune Response Using Robust Cell-Based Protocols
title_full_unstemmed Unveiling Interindividual Variability of Human Fibroblast Innate Immune Response Using Robust Cell-Based Protocols
title_short Unveiling Interindividual Variability of Human Fibroblast Innate Immune Response Using Robust Cell-Based Protocols
title_sort unveiling interindividual variability of human fibroblast innate immune response using robust cell-based protocols
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7829859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33505391
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.569331
work_keys_str_mv AT chansardaudrey unveilinginterindividualvariabilityofhumanfibroblastinnateimmuneresponseusingrobustcellbasedprotocols
AT dubrullenelly unveilinginterindividualvariabilityofhumanfibroblastinnateimmuneresponseusingrobustcellbasedprotocols
AT poujoldemolliensmathilde unveilinginterindividualvariabilityofhumanfibroblastinnateimmuneresponseusingrobustcellbasedprotocols
AT falangapierreb unveilinginterindividualvariabilityofhumanfibroblastinnateimmuneresponseusingrobustcellbasedprotocols
AT stephentharshana unveilinginterindividualvariabilityofhumanfibroblastinnateimmuneresponseusingrobustcellbasedprotocols
AT hasanmilena unveilinginterindividualvariabilityofhumanfibroblastinnateimmuneresponseusingrobustcellbasedprotocols
AT vanzandbergenger unveilinginterindividualvariabilityofhumanfibroblastinnateimmuneresponseusingrobustcellbasedprotocols
AT aulnernathalie unveilinginterindividualvariabilityofhumanfibroblastinnateimmuneresponseusingrobustcellbasedprotocols
AT shortespencerl unveilinginterindividualvariabilityofhumanfibroblastinnateimmuneresponseusingrobustcellbasedprotocols
AT davidwatinebrigitte unveilinginterindividualvariabilityofhumanfibroblastinnateimmuneresponseusingrobustcellbasedprotocols
AT unveilinginterindividualvariabilityofhumanfibroblastinnateimmuneresponseusingrobustcellbasedprotocols