scholarly journals Faculty Opinions recommendation of A molecular map of murine lymph node blood vascular endothelium at single cell resolution.

Author(s):  
Stephen Weiss
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Brulois ◽  
Anusha Rajaraman ◽  
Agata Szade ◽  
Sofia Nordling ◽  
Ania Bogoslowski ◽  
...  

The Prostate ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 70 (10) ◽  
pp. 1110-1118 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Schilling ◽  
Joerg Hennenlotter ◽  
Karl Sotlar ◽  
Ursula Kuehs ◽  
Erika Senger ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qingke Duan ◽  
Chao Tang ◽  
Zhao Ma ◽  
Chuangui Chen ◽  
Xiaobin Shang ◽  
...  

Gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) cancer is a tumor that occurs at the junction of stomach and esophagus anatomically. GEJ cancer frequently metastasizes to lymph nodes, however the heterogeneity and clonal evolution process are unclear. This study is the first of this kind to use single cell DNA sequencing to determine genomic variations and clonal evolution related to lymph node metastasis. Multiple Annealing and Looping Based Amplification Cycles (MALBAC) and bulk exome sequencing were performed to detect single cell copy number variations (CNVs) and single nucleotide variations (SNVs) respectively. Four GEJ cancer patients were enrolled with two (Pt.3, Pt.4) having metastatic lymph nodes. The most common mutation we found happened in the TTN gene, which was reported to be related with the tumor mutation burden in cancers. Significant intra-patient heterogeneity in SNVs and CNVs were found. We identified the SNV subclonal architecture in each tumor. To study the heterogeneity of CNVs, the single cells were sequenced. The number of subclones in the primary tumor was larger than that in lymph nodes, indicating the heterogeneity of primary site was higher. We observed two patterns of multi-station lymph node metastasis: one was skip metastasis and the other was to follow the lymphatic drainage. Taken together, our single cell genomic analysis has revealed the heterogeneity and clonal evolution in GEJ cancer.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 100021
Author(s):  
Akira Takeda ◽  
Sirpa Jalkanen

Nature ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 566 (7745) ◽  
pp. 490-495 ◽  
Author(s):  
Blanca Pijuan-Sala ◽  
Jonathan A. Griffiths ◽  
Carolina Guibentif ◽  
Tom W. Hiscock ◽  
Wajid Jawaid ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Betty G. Uzman ◽  
Marjorie Kasac

Electron microscopic studies of human tumors have been correlated by phase microscopy of ∼1μ sections with conventional histopathology. In tumor nodules from patients with fibrosarcoma (Fig. 1), malignant histiocytosis, and Hodgkin's disease (Figs. 2, 3, 4); in leukemic cells infiltrating spleen and lymph node; and in one parotid secretory cell (case of acute myeloblastic leukemia) alterations of the granular endoplasmic reticulum have been observed. These structures (indicated by arrows) resemble moth-eaten membranous bodies continuous with the encircling (Figs. 1, 2) or contiguous (Figs. 3, 4) cisternal wall. As many as five such alveolate reticular regions have been observed in a single cell.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven B. Wells ◽  
Peter A. Szabo ◽  
Nora Lam ◽  
Maya M.L. Poon

This protocol describes a method for the isolation of pan-lymphocytes, pan-myeloid cells, and progenitors from human lymph node tissue. By providing defined media formulations, volumes at each step, and a defined dilution factor for density centrifugation, it yields consistent single-cell suspensions across samples.


1982 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 277-292
Author(s):  
P. Andrews ◽  
D.W. Milsom ◽  
W.L. Ford

High endothelial cells lining the post capillary venules in the paracortical areas of rat lymph nodes were found by autoradiography to incorporate [35S]sulphate, whether it was injected into the footpad to reach the draining popliteal lymph node or added to short-term cultures of cervical lymph node slices. The early localization of [35S]sulphate was confined to the Golgi apparatus, but before it disappeared from the cell radioactivity was associated with cytoplasmic vesicles. Sulphated material in macromolecular form was extracted from lymph nodes that had been labelled in vivo and was also found in the supernatant of lymph node cultures. The labelled material was not proteoglycan in nature. High endothelial cells apparently secrete a sulphated macromolecule but its relationship to the only known function of high-walled endothelium—the selective extraction of lymphocytes from the blood—remains to be clarified.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 298-298
Author(s):  
Cornelis A.M. van Bergen ◽  
Marvyn T. Koning ◽  
Edwin Quinten ◽  
Agnieszka Mykowiecka ◽  
Julieta Sepulveda ◽  
...  

Objectives: Follicular lymphoma (FL) typically originates from premalignant mature B cells that carry the founder t(14;18) BCL2 translocation. Mutations in epigenetic modifiers and acquisition of N-glycosylation sites in CDR regions of the B-cell receptor (BCR) are recurrent secondary events in FL pathogenesis. Despite these oncogenic drivers, FL can remain indolent and clinically stable for years. The molecular events driving subclonal evolution into symptomatic progression and eventual transformation to aggressive lymphoma are insufficiently understood. FL cells are frozen in their B-cell development at the germinal center stage and undergo continuous somatic hypermutation mediated by expression of activation-induced deaminase (AID). We aim to identify crucial drivers of subclonal FL evolution by high-throughput mapping at single-cell resolution. Methods: Viable FL cells were isolated and cryopreserved from 23 histologically or immunocytologically confirmed FL samples from 13 patients with informed consent. Full-length VDJ/VJ transcripts were isolated by unbiased template-switching ARTISAN PCR and massive parallel NGS sequencing on the PacBio platform. The clonal primordial FL BCR (pBCR) was reconstructed from unmutated IGV/IGJ sequences with the CDR3 of the least mutated BCR. Since the IgTree program was unable to process the obtained numbers of BCR sequences, we developed the WILLOW algorithm for analysis of BCR evolution based on the principle of maximum parsimony and on distance from the pBCR. Intraclonal BCR variability was quantified by Shannon's diversity index. 5' single cell transcriptomics and VDJ/VJ sequencing was performed on 2 pools of highly purified FL cells from 5 lymph node biopsies on the 10x Genomics platform. Data were deconvoluted based on expressed variants by the Single Cell Sample Matcher (SCSM) algorithm. Clustering based on gene expression profiles was performed by shared nearest neighbour (SNN) modularity optimization within the R Seurat package. Genes whose expression differed significantly (adjusted p<0.05) between clusters were assigned to gene ontology terms. Results: ARTISAN PCR/PacBio NGS yielded a median of 743 full-length VDJ and VJ sequences (range 62-12782) per BCR chain with expected high intraclonal diversity (median 200 subclones, range 15-3301). WILLOW revealed dominant FL subclones with a subclonal hierarchy wherein multiple routes converged to offspring nodes with identical additional mutations rather than tree-like branching (Figure). In serial samples of 4 patients, lymph node biopsies had only marginally higher subclonal diversity than blood or bone marrow samples (p=0,055; Wilcoxon's matched-pairs signed rank test). Overall BCR mutational burden increased over time in sequential biopsies. Two cases of histological FL transformation were dominated by a single subclone (65% and 80% of all VDJ/VJ sequences, respectively) that was rare in the preceding FL BCR network (0.2% and 1.8%). Pooled transcriptomics data from 6050-6500 cells were assigned to individual samples by SCSM and revealed up to seven transcriptional clusters per FL. In 9 of 10 FL, genes assigned to immune function strongly contributed to separation into one or more clusters. Single cell VDJ/VJ sequencing yielded combined heavy and light chain BCR sequences for a median of 502 FL cells per biopsy (range 22 - 1919) that permitted mapping of subclonal evolution by WILLOW based on complete BCR information. Transcriptome clusters were not distributed evenly throughout the WILLOW FL BCR networks but rather statistically associated with distinct major FL subclones. Vice versa, major FL subclones within the same biopsy were distinguished by particular gene expression profiles. Conclusions: WILLOW facilitates mapping of subclonal FL evolution based on high-throughput BCR sequencing. FL evolution proceeds in networks rather than tree-like branching, whereby acquisition of certain combinations of several BCR mutations can occur in parallel in different trajectories. Transcriptomic profiling of single FL cells identifies distinct clusters within a single biopsy. Mapping of these clusters to the FL cell position in the subclonal FL evolutionary network identifies putative mechanisms that are associated with subclonal progression. These mechanisms involve physiological B-cell signalling pathways. Figure Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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