Development and evaluation of a whole blood-based approach for flow cytometric quantification of CD154+ mould-reactive T cells

Philipp Weis, Johanna Helm, Lukas Page, Chris D. Lauruschkat, Maria Lazariotou, Hermann Einsele, Juergen Loeffler, Andrew J. Ullmann, Sebastian Wurster

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

CD154+ mould-reactive T cells were proposed as a novel biomarker in the diagnosis of invasive mycoses. As PBMC-based protocols for flow cytometric quantification of these cells are logistically challenging and susceptible to preanalytic delays, this study evaluated and optimized a whole blood-based method for the detection of mould-reactive T cells. Blood collection tubes containing costimulatory antibodies and Aspergillus fumigatus mycelial lysates were inoculated with heparinized whole blood from healthy adults, and detection rates of CD154+/CD4+A. fumigatus reactive T cells were compared with PBMC-based detection using samples from the same donors. In contrast to the PBMC-based method, double costimulation with αCD28 and αCD49d was crucial for reliable whole blood stimulation. Optimizing stimulation schemes for both matrixes, significantly higher specific T-cell detection rates were achieved by the whole blood-based method, whereas the unspecific background stimulation remained low. MHC II-dependent CD154+ upregulation was demonstrated for both matrixes. Excellent correlation and reproducible conversion factors between whole blood and PBMC-based results were observed. Using frozen ready-to-use test tubes containing costimulatory antibodies and lysates, detection rates of specific T cells were comparable to freshly prepared blood collection tubes. The optimized whole blood-based protocol was also used to detect Rhizopus arrhizus and Rhizomucor pusillus reactive T cells, resulting in 1.5- to 2.7-fold higher detection rates compared with PBMC-based measurement. In summary, the whole blood protocol is a robust, highly sensitive, and cost-effective method for mould-reactive T-cell quantification, allowing for point-of-care sample stimulation and contributing to better assay standardization in multi-centre evaluation of mould reactive T-cell quantification.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)187-196
Number of pages10
JournalMedical mycology
Volume58
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 1 2020

Keywords

  • Aspergillus
  • Mucorales
  • T cells
  • biomarker
  • blood test
  • immunology

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Infectious Diseases

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