4.1 Article

Acute Lymph Node Slices Are a Functional Model System to Study Immunity Ex Vivo

Journal

ACS PHARMACOLOGY & TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCE
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages 128-142

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsptsci.0c00143

Keywords

explants; live imaging; immunofluorescence; functional assays; lymphoid organs

Funding

  1. Hartwell Foundation
  2. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases through the National Institutes of Health [R01AI131723]
  3. Immunology Training Grant at the University of Virginia (NIH) [5T32AI007496-23]

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Live murine lymph node tissue slices provide a versatile platform for studying immunity, maintaining spatial organization and cell populations while reflecting the 3D complexity of the organ. These slices show comparable viability and inflammatory response to cell suspensions, and exhibit stronger reactions to T cell receptor cross-linking in some cases. Additionally, they process protein antigens and respond to ex vivo challenge with antigen-specific cytokine secretion.
The lymph node is a highly organized and dynamic structure that is critical for facilitating the intercellular interactions that constitute adaptive immunity. Most ex vivo studies of the lymph node begin by reducing it to a cell suspension, thus losing the spatial organization, or fixing it, thus losing the ability to make repeated measurements. Live murine lymph node tissue slices offer the potential to retain spatial complexity and dynamic accessibility, but their viability, level of immune activation, and retention of antigen-specific functions have not been validated. Here we systematically characterized live murine lymph node slices as a platform to study immunity. Live lymph node slices maintained the expected spatial organization and cell populations while reflecting the 3D spatial complexity of the organ. Slices collected under optimized conditions were comparable to cell suspensions in terms of both 24-h viability and inflammation. Slices responded to T cell receptor cross-linking with increased surface marker expression and cytokine secretion, in some cases more strongly than matched lymphocyte cultures. Furthermore, slices processed protein antigens, and slices from vaccinated animals responded to ex vivo challenge with antigen-specific cytokine secretion. In summary, lymph node slices provide a versatile platform to investigate immune functions in spatially organized tissue, enabling well-defined stimulation, time-course analysis, and parallel read-outs.

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