Product Citations: 10

miR-Blood - a small RNA atlas of human blood components.

In Scientific Data on 2 February 2024 by Jehn, J., Trudzinski, F., et al.

miR-Blood is a high-quality, small RNA expression atlas for the major components of human peripheral blood (plasma, erythrocytes, thrombocytes, monocytes, neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils, natural killer cells, CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells, and B cells). Based on the purified blood components from 52 individuals, the dataset provides a comprehensive repository for the expression of 4971 small RNAs from eight non-coding RNA classes.
© 2024. The Author(s).

  • Homo sapiens (Human)
  • Cardiovascular biology
  • Genetics

TRAPnSeq allows high-throughput profiling of antigen-specific antibody-secreting cells.

In Cell Rep Methods on 24 July 2023 by Asrat, S., Devlin, J. C., et al.

Following activation by cognate antigen, B cells undergo fine-tuning of their antigen receptors and may ultimately differentiate into antibody-secreting cells (ASCs). While antigen-specific B cells that express surface receptors (B cell receptors [BCRs]) can be readily cloned and sequenced following flow sorting, antigen-specific ASCs that lack surface BCRs cannot be easily profiled. Here, we report an approach, TRAPnSeq (antigen specificity mapping through immunoglobulin [Ig] secretion TRAP and Sequencing), that allows capture of secreted antibodies on the surface of ASCs, which in turn enables high-throughput screening of single ASCs against large antigen panels. This approach incorporates flow cytometry, standard microfluidic platforms, and DNA-barcoding technologies to characterize antigen-specific ASCs through single-cell V(D)J, RNA, and antigen barcode sequencing. We show the utility of TRAPnSeq by profiling antigen-specific IgG and IgE ASCs from both mice and humans and highlight its capacity to accelerate therapeutic antibody discovery from ASCs.
© 2023 The Authors.

  • Immunology and Microbiology

The role of innate lymphoid cells (ILCs)-including natural killer cells, helper-like ILC1s, ILC2s, ILC3s, and lymphoid tissue inducers-in human cancer is still poorly understood due to the scarcity of cell number. To address this, we present a protocol to analyze or purify ILCs from human blood, adjacent intestine, and colorectal tumor tissue. We describe steps for tissue and blood treatment, density centrifugation, antibody staining, and cell sorting. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Qi et al. (2021).1.
Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.

  • Cardiovascular biology

Mapping the evolution of T cell states during response and resistance to adoptive cellular therapy.

In Cell Reports on 9 November 2021 by Bachireddy, P., Azizi, E., et al.

To elucidate mechanisms by which T cells eliminate leukemia, we study donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI), an established immunotherapy for relapsed leukemia. We model T cell dynamics by integrating longitudinal, multimodal data from 94,517 bone marrow-derived single T cell transcriptomes in addition to chromatin accessibility and single T cell receptor sequencing from patients undergoing DLI. We find that responsive tumors are defined by enrichment of late-differentiated T cells before DLI and rapid, durable expansion of early differentiated T cells after treatment, highly similar to "terminal" and "precursor" exhausted subsets, respectively. Resistance, in contrast, is defined by heterogeneous T cell dysfunction. Surprisingly, early differentiated T cells in responders mainly originate from pre-existing and novel clonotypes recruited to the leukemic microenvironment, rather than the infusion. Our work provides a paradigm for analyzing longitudinal single-cell profiling of scenarios beyond adoptive cell therapy and introduces Symphony, a Bayesian approach to infer regulatory circuitry underlying T cell subsets, with broad relevance to exhaustion antagonists across cancers.
Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  • Homo sapiens (Human)
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are tissue-resident lymphocytes differing from conventional T lymphocytes in having no antigen-specific receptors. ILCs include natural killer (NK) cells, helper-like ILC1s, ILC2s, and ILC3s, and lymphoid tissue-inducer (LTi) cells. Tumor ILCs are frequently found in various cancers, but their roles in cancer immunity and immunotherapy remain largely unclear. We report here the single-cell characterization of blood and gut helper-like ILC subsets in healthy conditions and in colorectal cancer (CRC). The healthy gut contains ILC1s, ILC3s, and ILC3/NKs, but no ILC2s. Additional tumor-specific ILC1-like and ILC2 subsets were identified in CRC patients. Signaling lymphocytic activation molecule family member 1 (SLAMF1) was found to be selectively expressed on tumor-specific ILCs, and higher levels of SLAMF1+ ILCs were observed in the blood of CRC patients. The SLAMF1-high group of CRC patients had a significantly higher survival rate than the SLAMF1-low group, suggesting that SLAMF1 is an anti-tumor biomarker in CRC.
© 2021 The Authors.

  • Homo sapiens (Human)
  • Cancer Research
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