Importance of culturing primary lymphocytes at physiological oxygen levels PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Atkuri, K. R., Herzenberg, L. A., Niemi, A., Cowan, T., Herzenberg, L. A. 2007; 104 (11): 4547-4552

Abstract

Although studies with primary lymphocytes are almost always conducted in CO(2) incubators maintained at atmospheric oxygen levels (atmosO(2); 20%), the physiological oxygen levels (physO(2); 5%) that cells encounter in vivo are 2-4 times lower. We show here that culturing primary T cells at atmosO(2) significantly alters the intracellular redox state (decreases intracellular glutathione, increases oxidized intracellular glutathione), whereas culturing at physO(2) maintains the intracellular redox environment (intracellular glutathione/oxidized intracellular glutathione) close to its in vivo status. Furthermore, we show that CD3/CD28-induced T cell proliferation (based on proliferation index and cell yield) is higher at atmosO(2) than at physO(2). This apparently paradoxical finding, we suggest, may be explained by two additional findings with CD3/CD28-stimulated T cells: (i) the intracellular NO (iNO) levels are higher at physO(2) than at atmosO(2); and (ii) the peak expression of CD69 is significantly delayed and more sustained at physO(2) that at atmosO(2). Because high levels of intracellular NO and sustained CD69 tend to down-regulate T cell responses in vivo, the lower proliferative T cell responses at physO(2) likely reflect the in vitro operation of the natural in vivo regulatory mechanisms. Thus, we suggest caution in culturing primary lymphocytes at atmosO(2) because the requisite adaptation to nonphysiological oxygen levels may seriously skew T cell responses, particularly after several days in culture.

View details for DOI 10.1073/pnas.0611732104

View details for Web of Science ID 000244972700055

View details for PubMedID 17360561

View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1838638