RESUMO
Adaptive T and B lymphocytes expand, respond, and persist across a multitude of separable cell differentiation states. Small compartments of these cells present defined cell surface phenotype, but express potentially divergent immune functions. Here, we use high resolution flow cytometry to provide direct access to rare lymphocyte subpopulations for evaluation of steady-state or reactive transcriptional programs. We sort and index single cells by phenotype in 384-well format for quantification of targeted gene amplification through RNA sequencing (single cell qtSEQ). For complete details on the use and execution of this profile, please refer to Dufaud et al. (2021).
Assuntos
Linfócitos B , Subpopulações de Linfócitos , Citometria de Fluxo , Contagem de Linfócitos , Análise de Sequência de RNARESUMO
Successful vaccination relies on driving the immune response towards high specificity, affinity and longevity. Germinal centers facilitate the evolution of antigen-specific B cells by iterative rounds of diversification, selection, and differentiation to memory and plasma cells. Experimental evidence points to B cell receptor affinity and amount of antigen presented to follicular helper T cells as main drivers of clonal evolution. Concurrent studies suggest that modifiers of cognate contact, temporal mechanisms, and stochastic factors can also shape diversity and influence differentiation to memory and plasma cells, but molecular pathways driving these selection decisions are unresolved. Due to rapid cycles of transcriptional change in the germinal center, single-cell resolution is imperative to dissect mechanisms dictating the mature antigen-specific repertoire. Future studies linking high-resolution analysis of this diverse evolving population with cellular outcome are needed to fully understand the complex mechanisms of selection driving antigen-specific humoral immunity.