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Establishing CD19 B-cell reference control materials for comparable and quantitative cytometric expression analysis

In the field of cell-based therapeutics, there is a great need for high-quality, robust, and validated measurements for cell characterization. Flow cytometry has emerged as a critically important platform due to its high-throughput capability and its ability to simultaneously measure multiple parame...

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Autores principales: Wang, Lili, Bhardwaj, Rukmini, Mostowski, Howard, Patrone, Paul N., Kearsley, Anthony J., Watson, Jessica, Lim, Liang, Pichaandi, Jothir, Ornatsky, Olga, Majonis, Daniel, Bauer, Steven R., Degheidy, Heba A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7978366/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33740004
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248118
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author Wang, Lili
Bhardwaj, Rukmini
Mostowski, Howard
Patrone, Paul N.
Kearsley, Anthony J.
Watson, Jessica
Lim, Liang
Pichaandi, Jothir
Ornatsky, Olga
Majonis, Daniel
Bauer, Steven R.
Degheidy, Heba A.
author_facet Wang, Lili
Bhardwaj, Rukmini
Mostowski, Howard
Patrone, Paul N.
Kearsley, Anthony J.
Watson, Jessica
Lim, Liang
Pichaandi, Jothir
Ornatsky, Olga
Majonis, Daniel
Bauer, Steven R.
Degheidy, Heba A.
author_sort Wang, Lili
collection PubMed
description In the field of cell-based therapeutics, there is a great need for high-quality, robust, and validated measurements for cell characterization. Flow cytometry has emerged as a critically important platform due to its high-throughput capability and its ability to simultaneously measure multiple parameters in the same sample. However, to assure the confidence in measurement, well characterized biological reference materials are needed for standardizing clinical assays and harmonizing flow cytometric results between laboratories. To date, the lack of adequate reference materials, and the complexity of the cytometer instrumentation have resulted in few standards. This study was designed to evaluate CD19 expression in three potential biological cell reference materials and provide a preliminary assessment of their suitability to support future development of CD19 reference standards. Three commercially available human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) obtained from three different manufacturers were tested. Variables that could potentially contribute to the differences in the CD19 expression, such as PBMCs manufacturing process, number of healthy donors used in manufacturing each PBMC lot, antibody reagent, operators, and experimental days were included in our evaluation. CD19 antibodies bound per cell (ABC) values were measured using two flow cytometry-based quantification schemes with two independent calibration methods, a single point calibration using a CD4 reference cell and QuantiBrite PE bead calibration. Three lots of PBMC from three different manufacturers were obtained. Each lot of PBMC was tested on three different experimental days by three operators using three different lots of unimolar anti-CD19PE conjugates. CD19 ABC values were obtained in parallel on a selected lot of the PBMC samples using mass spectrometry (CyTOF) with two independent calibration methods, EQ4 and bead-based calibration were evaluated with CyTOF-technology. Including all studied variabilities such as PBMC lot, antibody reagent lot, and operator, the averaged mean values of CD19 ABC for the three PBMC manufacturers (A,B, and C) obtained by flow cytometry were found to be: 7953 with a %CV of 9.0 for PBMC-A, 10535 with a %CV of 7.8 for PBMC-B, and 12384 with a %CV of 16 for PBMC-C. These CD19 ABC values agree closely with the findings using CyTOF. The averaged mean values of CD19 ABC for the tested PBMCs is 9295 using flow cytometry-based method and 9699 using CyTOF. The relative contributions from various sources of uncertainty in CD19 ABC values were quantified for the flow cytometry-based measurement scheme. This uncertainty analysis suggests that the number of antigens or ligand binding sites per cell in each PBMC preparation is the largest source of variability. On the other hand, the calibration method does not add significant uncertainty to the expression estimates. Our preliminary assessment showed the suitability of the tested materials to serve as PBMC-based CD19+ reference control materials for use in quantifying relevant B cell markers in B cell lymphoproliferative disorders and immunotherapy. However, users should consider the variabilities resulting from different lots of PBMC and antibody reagent when utilizing cell-based reference materials for quantification purposes and perform bridging studies to ensure harmonization between the results before switching to a new lot.
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spelling pubmed-79783662021-03-30 Establishing CD19 B-cell reference control materials for comparable and quantitative cytometric expression analysis Wang, Lili Bhardwaj, Rukmini Mostowski, Howard Patrone, Paul N. Kearsley, Anthony J. Watson, Jessica Lim, Liang Pichaandi, Jothir Ornatsky, Olga Majonis, Daniel Bauer, Steven R. Degheidy, Heba A. PLoS One Research Article In the field of cell-based therapeutics, there is a great need for high-quality, robust, and validated measurements for cell characterization. Flow cytometry has emerged as a critically important platform due to its high-throughput capability and its ability to simultaneously measure multiple parameters in the same sample. However, to assure the confidence in measurement, well characterized biological reference materials are needed for standardizing clinical assays and harmonizing flow cytometric results between laboratories. To date, the lack of adequate reference materials, and the complexity of the cytometer instrumentation have resulted in few standards. This study was designed to evaluate CD19 expression in three potential biological cell reference materials and provide a preliminary assessment of their suitability to support future development of CD19 reference standards. Three commercially available human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) obtained from three different manufacturers were tested. Variables that could potentially contribute to the differences in the CD19 expression, such as PBMCs manufacturing process, number of healthy donors used in manufacturing each PBMC lot, antibody reagent, operators, and experimental days were included in our evaluation. CD19 antibodies bound per cell (ABC) values were measured using two flow cytometry-based quantification schemes with two independent calibration methods, a single point calibration using a CD4 reference cell and QuantiBrite PE bead calibration. Three lots of PBMC from three different manufacturers were obtained. Each lot of PBMC was tested on three different experimental days by three operators using three different lots of unimolar anti-CD19PE conjugates. CD19 ABC values were obtained in parallel on a selected lot of the PBMC samples using mass spectrometry (CyTOF) with two independent calibration methods, EQ4 and bead-based calibration were evaluated with CyTOF-technology. Including all studied variabilities such as PBMC lot, antibody reagent lot, and operator, the averaged mean values of CD19 ABC for the three PBMC manufacturers (A,B, and C) obtained by flow cytometry were found to be: 7953 with a %CV of 9.0 for PBMC-A, 10535 with a %CV of 7.8 for PBMC-B, and 12384 with a %CV of 16 for PBMC-C. These CD19 ABC values agree closely with the findings using CyTOF. The averaged mean values of CD19 ABC for the tested PBMCs is 9295 using flow cytometry-based method and 9699 using CyTOF. The relative contributions from various sources of uncertainty in CD19 ABC values were quantified for the flow cytometry-based measurement scheme. This uncertainty analysis suggests that the number of antigens or ligand binding sites per cell in each PBMC preparation is the largest source of variability. On the other hand, the calibration method does not add significant uncertainty to the expression estimates. Our preliminary assessment showed the suitability of the tested materials to serve as PBMC-based CD19+ reference control materials for use in quantifying relevant B cell markers in B cell lymphoproliferative disorders and immunotherapy. However, users should consider the variabilities resulting from different lots of PBMC and antibody reagent when utilizing cell-based reference materials for quantification purposes and perform bridging studies to ensure harmonization between the results before switching to a new lot. Public Library of Science 2021-03-19 /pmc/articles/PMC7978366/ /pubmed/33740004 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248118 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wang, Lili
Bhardwaj, Rukmini
Mostowski, Howard
Patrone, Paul N.
Kearsley, Anthony J.
Watson, Jessica
Lim, Liang
Pichaandi, Jothir
Ornatsky, Olga
Majonis, Daniel
Bauer, Steven R.
Degheidy, Heba A.
Establishing CD19 B-cell reference control materials for comparable and quantitative cytometric expression analysis
title Establishing CD19 B-cell reference control materials for comparable and quantitative cytometric expression analysis
title_full Establishing CD19 B-cell reference control materials for comparable and quantitative cytometric expression analysis
title_fullStr Establishing CD19 B-cell reference control materials for comparable and quantitative cytometric expression analysis
title_full_unstemmed Establishing CD19 B-cell reference control materials for comparable and quantitative cytometric expression analysis
title_short Establishing CD19 B-cell reference control materials for comparable and quantitative cytometric expression analysis
title_sort establishing cd19 b-cell reference control materials for comparable and quantitative cytometric expression analysis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7978366/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33740004
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248118
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