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A critical assessment for the value of markers to gate-out undesired events in HLA-peptide multimer staining protocols

Authors :
Michael W. Pride
Sylvia Janetzki
Kunle Odunsi
Timothy M. Clay
Leah Price
Jianda Yuan
Michael Kalos
Axel Hoos
Pedro Romero
Sebastian Attig
Cedrik M. Britten
Lisa K. McNeil
CRI-CIC Assay Working Group
Source :
Journal of Translational Medicine, Vol 9, Iss 1, p 108 (2011), Journal of Translational Medicine, vol. 9, pp. 108, Journal of Translational Medicine
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2011.

Abstract

Background The introduction of antibody markers to identify undesired cell populations in flow-cytometry based assays, so called DUMP channel markers, has become a practice in an increasing number of labs performing HLA-peptide multimer assays. However, the impact of the introduction of a DUMP channel in multimer assays has so far not been systematically investigated across a broad variety of protocols. Methods The Cancer Research Institute's Cancer Immunotherapy Consortium (CRI-CIC) conducted a multimer proficiency panel with a specific focus on the impact of DUMP channel use. The panel design allowed individual laboratories to use their own protocol for thawing, staining, gating, and data analysis. Each experiment was performed twice and in parallel, with and without the application of a dump channel strategy. Results The introduction of a DUMP channel is an effective measure to reduce the amount of non-specific MULTIMER binding to T cells. Beneficial effects for the use of a DUMP channel were observed across a wide range of individual laboratories and for all tested donor-antigen combinations. In 48% of experiments we observed a reduction of the background MULTIMER-binding. In this subgroup of experiments the median background reduction observed after introduction of a DUMP channel was 0.053%. Conclusions We conclude that appropriate use of a DUMP channel can significantly reduce background staining across a large fraction of protocols and improve the ability to accurately detect and quantify the frequency of antigen-specific T cells by multimer reagents. Thus, use of a DUMP channel may become crucial for detecting low frequency antigen-specific immune responses. Further recommendations on assay performance and data presentation guidelines for publication of MULTIMER experimental data are provided.

Details

ISSN :
14795876
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Translational Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bbeec3358a857e60243e205aa264522c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-9-108