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Phenotypic characteristics of lymphocyte populations isolated from middle gestation human placenta.

Authors :
Erbach GT
Semple JP
Milford E
Goguen J
Osathanondh R
Kurnick JT
Source :
Journal of reproductive immunology [J Reprod Immunol] 1993 Sep; Vol. 25 (1), pp. 1-13.
Publication Year :
1993

Abstract

In order to characterize the phenotypic composition of populations of lymphoid cells in maternal and fetal tissues during the period of middle gestation, mononuclear cells were isolated from maternal peripheral blood, fetal spleen, fetal thymus and placenta of 18-24 week pregnancies. Peripheral blood and placental isolates were stained for a number of lymphoid cell markers by indirect immunofluorescence and analyzed by flow cytometry. Studies were performed on both freshly isolated mononuclear cell preparations and in vitro cultured cells after selective expansion in interleukin 2 (IL2). Fresh placental mononuclear cell isolates were an average 20% CD3+; their CD4/CD8 ratios varied among individuals. An average of 68% of the lymphocytes isolated from maternal peripheral blood were CD3+. Placental and maternal peripheral blood isolates had comparable percentages of CD16+ and CD20+ cells, while CD56+ cells were present at significantly greater numbers in the lymphocyte compartment of placenta (17%) than in peripheral blood (3%; P < 0.01). Lymphocyte isolates were expanded by culture with IL2 and PHA and stained to determine if propagated lymphocyte populations are representative of initial isolates. Expansion of all lymphocyte isolates favored CD3 phenotypes and CD8 phenotypes. Compared to expanded placenta-derived populations, expanded peripheral blood lymphocytes were similar with regard to percentages of all phenotypes except gamma/delta T cells which represented more of placental lymphocytes (10%) than peripheral lymphocytes (5%; P < 0.01). Surface HLA typing determined propagated placenta-derived lymphocytes to be of maternal and not fetal origin. In vitro propagation of placental mononuclear cell isolates may therefore provide populations of maternal CD3+ lymphocytes for assessment of function and specificity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0165-0378
Volume :
25
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of reproductive immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
8271236
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/0165-0378(93)90038-j