Objectives: Previous in vivo studies on dendritic cell (DC) enumeration in coronary artery disease (CAD) were not always consistent. Therefore, we investigated by flow cytometry whether this was due to CAD-related differences in expression of subset markers for myeloid (m)DCs (blood DC antigen (BDCA)-1, CD11c) and plasmacytoid (p)DCs (BDCA-2, CD123), before and after in vitro stimulation with Toll-like receptor ligands.
Results: Our data showed that circulating DCs decline in CAD, irrespective of the DC subset marker that was used for enumeration. Upon in vitro activation, BDCA-2 was downregulated, whereas CD11c and CD123 were upregulated. This implies that the expression ratios CD11c/BDCA-1 and CD123/BDCA-2 can assess DC activation. Comparing these ratios between controls and CAD patients showed no differences in blood DC activation in both groups.
Conclusions: This study suggests that when different DC numbers are found between two study populations, the DC activation status from both groups always needs to be verified, since a decrease in BDCA-2(+) pDCs or an increase in CD11c(+) mDCs or CD123(+) pDCs can be due to the altered expression of these markers during activation. Given that CD11c, BDCA-1, CD123 and BDCA-2 are more abundantly expressed on blood DCs than typical activation markers like CD83, CD86 or CCR-7, the use of the ratios is an easy and reliable way to determine DC activation in whole blood assays.
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