Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Effect of storage conditions on subpopulations of peripheral blood T lymphocytes isolated from naïve cattle and cattle infected with foot-and-mouth disease virus.
- Journal:
- Veterinary clinical pathology
- Year:
- 2016
- Authors:
- Eschbaumer, Michael et al.
- Affiliation:
- United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) · United States
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Immunophenotyping of blood lymphocytes by flow cytometry is important in infectious disease research. In animal experiments and other longitudinal studies, the processing, prompt staining, and analysis of fresh samples is a logistical challenge and daily assay variation can confound data interpretation. OBJECTIVE: This study examined the feasibility of cryopreservation and deferred analysis of bovine peripheral blood T lymphocytes from normal or infected animals. METHODS: Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were collected from 4 naïve Holstein steers and 4 steers infected with foot-and-mouth-disease virus serotype Asia1. Identical aliquots were labeled and analyzed immediately, labeled for deferred analysis, or stored at -70°C or over liquid nitrogen for up to 3 weeks before labeling. RESULTS: Freezing of unlabeled cells induced statistically significant changes in phenotypic recognition. In infected animals, the γδ T-cell population increased by 28% and CD8(+) αβT cells by 32%, while total CD3(+) cells decreased by 16%, and CD4(+) αβT cells decreased by 12%. Subsequent storage of frozen cells for the duration of the study, however, had no significant effect. There was less than 20% relative change in subpopulation sizes, and storage at -70°C or over liquid nitrogen was equivalent. CONCLUSIONS: Depending on the objectives and practical limitations of a study, deferred labeling of peripheral blood lymphocytes can be a viable option. Although frozen storage of lymphocytes can introduce some artifactual distortion of relative cell populations, frozen cells can be maintained in storage until all samples in a longitudinal study can be analyzed in batch under standardized conditions and without introducing further bias.
Find similar cases for your pet
PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.
Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26802284/