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Principles and Application of Flow Cytometry

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Title: Principles and Application of Flow Cytometry


1
Principles and Application of Flow Cytometry
  • Rodney Stuart, MD
  • August 5,2005

2
Objectives
  • Basic principles of flow cytometry
  • Separation of cells on appearance
  • Separation based on light emitting dyes
  • Eliminating bleed over between colors
  • Studying the cells of interest
  • Examples of difficult cases

3
Flow Cytometry
  • First labeled with fluorescent dyes.
  • Forced through a nozzle in a single-cell stream
    passing through a laser beam
  • The laser is focused to a known wavelength
  • Excitation of a specific fluorochrome
  • Photo-multiplier tubes detect the scattering of
    light and emission from the fluorescent dye

4
Forward Scatter
  • Cells pass through a small (50-300 µm) orifice
  • Detection ranges from 0.5-40 µm
  • the amount of light scattered in the forward
    direction (along the same axis that the laser
    light is traveling) size of cell

5
Side Scatter
  • the amount of light scattered to the side
    (perpendicular to the axis that the laser light
    is traveling) is detected in the side or 90o
    scatter channel
  • Equates to shape and homogeneity of cells
    (AKA-granularity/complexity)

6
Forward and Side Scatter
7
Fluorescence Channels
  • The specificity of detection is controlled by the
    wavelength selectivity of optical filters and
    mirrors

8
Fluorochromes
9
One Parameter Histogram
  • A one-parameter histogram is a graph of cell
    count on the y-axis and the measurement parameter
    on x-axis.

Events
FITC
10
Two Parameter Histograms
  • A graph representing two measurement parameters,
    on the x- and y-axes, and cell count height on a
    density gradient. This is similar to a
    topographical map.

11
Compensation
  • The inherent overlap of emission spectra from
    antibody fluorescent labels makes compensation
    necessary.
  • Use a negative control to set your High Voltages
    (HV) per detector. As a rule of thumb  set the
    High Voltages so that your negatives are in the
    1st decade of the parameters being collected.
    Lower high voltage settings will also result in
    lower compensation settings.

12
Compensation
  • The amount of spectral overlap is corrected by
    subtracting a percentage from the total of FL1
    fluorochrome pulse generated by the FL1 detector.
    The FL1 fluorochrome spillover detected by the
    FL2 detector can be viewed as interference. By
    subtracting a percentage of the total FL1
    fluorochrome pulse from the total pulse generated
    by the FL2 detector (eg. PE FITC interference)
    you can obtain a FL2 fluorochrome only pulse.
  • Running samples that are individually stained
    with the antibody-fluorochrome components of
    your multi-color samples aids in appropriate
    compensation.

13
Compensation
  • FL1 FL1 - FL2 compensation slider

14
Compensation
/
-/
/-
-/-
15
Gating
  • Allow you to view cells of interest
  • lets you decide which data to view and which data
    to ignore or discard.
  • Gating can subsequently be changed when you
    analyze your data without any loss of
    information.

16
Case Scenarios
  • Non-Hodgkin B cell Lymphoma/Leukemia

17
Case 1
  • 31 year-old African American HIV male who
    presents with a rapidly enlarging neck mass

18
(No Transcript)
19
Follicular Lymphoma(FL)
  • Most common NHL in the Western World (45 of
    adult lymphomas)
  • Middle age distribution affecting males and
    female equally
  • Morphology partial or often complete nodal
    architectural effacement by numerous closely
    packed follicular nodules that most frequently
    homogenous with numerous small cleaved follicular
    center cells/centrocytes and larger cells with
    open nuclear chromatin, several nucleoli, and
    modest amounts of cytoplasm, referred to as
    centroblasts
  • Bone marrow involvement in 85 of patients
    (paratrabecular)

20
Immunophenotyping
  • Strong CD19, CD20
  • Monotypic immunoglobulin or no surface Ig
    expression
  • CD10 positive
  • Negative for CD5 and CD43

21
Diffuse Large B-cell(DLBCL)
  • 20 of NHL
  • Median age of 60 years with a male predominance
  • However age range is wide (5 of childhood
    lymphoma)
  • 4 variants centroblastic, immunoblastic,
    T-cell/histocyte-rich, and anaplastic
  • Morphology diffuse large lymphoid cells (4-5X
    the size of small lymphocytes)with vesicular
    chromatin. Nuclear features can range from
    multilobated, cleaved, or even the appearance of
    Reed-Sternberg cells

22
Immunophenotyping
  • CD20 and CD19 seen in many but not all
  • More common than FL to be sIg negative
  • Some contain cytoplasmic Ig
  • Some mark like FL (CD5-, CD10,bcl-6, bcl-2)
    but can lack CD10, bcl-6, and bcl-2

23
Burkitt Lymphoma (BL)
  • Rapidly dividing transformed cell lymphoma
  • Adolescents or young adults
  • Follicular formation in a minority of cases
  • Morphology Diffuse infiltrate of
    intermediate-sized lymphoid cells.
  • Round or oval nuclei with course chromatin,
    several nucleoli, and basophilic or amphophilic
    cytoplasm
  • Starry sky appearance due to presence of
    numerous tingible-body macrophages

24
Immunophenotyping
  • CD19, CD20
  • CD10
  • BCL6
  • Express monotypic light chains
  • Cytoplasmic Ig may be present
  • CD5-

25
Immunophenotype Comparison
26
Cytogenetics
  • Follicular Lymphoma t(1418) (Ig-H and bcl-2
    gene) (90 of FL)
  • Diffuse Large B cell Lymphoma variable, many
    with translocations involving chromosome 3q27
    (BCL6 locus), 10-20 contain t(1418)
  • Burkitt Lymphoma c-myc associated t(814),
    t(822), t(28)

27
Case 2
  • 58 year old Caucasian male initially presented
    with fatigability, weight loss, and anorexia. He
    was found to have CLL and is currently on
    chemotherapy.

28
Small Lymphocytic Lymphoma/Chronic Lymphocytic
Leukemia
  • CLL Most common Leukemia in adults in the
    Western world
  • SLL 4 of NHL
  • Older adults
  • Morphology population of small lymphocytes
    containing round to slightly irregular nuclei
    with condensed chromatin and scant cytoplasm,
    mixed with larger prolymphocytes
  • Smudge cell on peripheral smear

29
Immunophenotype
  • CD19 and CD20
  • CD23 and CD5
  • Low level expression of sIg and monotypic light
    chain

30

31
Rituximab
  • anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody
  • Rituxan may induce antibody-dependent
    cell-mediated cytotoxicity
  • Rituxan may also induce complement-dependent
    cytotoxicity
  • Causes decrease in CD20 available for detection
    ab to bind
  • Either through direct binding site competition
  • Or transient down-regulation of CD20

32
Case 3
14 year-old Caucasian male with previously
diagnosed lymphoid neoplasm for which he was
treated with chemotherapy. He has been
clinically asymptomatic with close follow-up for
the last year. Current bone marrow biopsy
obtained is shown here
33
Case 3
34
Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL)
  • Consists of immature, pre-cursor B (Pre-B) (85)
    or T (Pre-T) lymphocytes
  • Pre-B manifests in childhood (many subtypes by
    European Group for the Immunological
    Characterization of Leukemias)
  • Pre-T manifests in adolescents
  • Morphologically indistinguishable
  • Immunophenotyping needed for typing

35
ALL Immunophenotyping
  • Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT)
    gt95 of time
  • Pre-B
  • Positive for CD19, CD22, CD79a, CD24, CD34,
    CD45, HLADR, CD38, CD9, and CD10
  • Negative for surface Ig expression
  • Pre-T
  • Positive for CD1, CD2, CD5, CD7

36
Case 3
37
Hematogones
  • Bone marrow B-cell precursors (detected on flow
    in 80 of bone marrow aspirates)
  • Cytologic features
  • Size 10-20 microns
  • May appear as mature lymphocytes
  • Small cell with round or oval nucleus
  • May be indistinguishable from neoplastic
    lymphoblasts
  • Sometimes exhibits 1 or more indentations or
    shallow clefts with condensed chromatin
  • Rim of deeply basophilic cytoplasm

38
Hematogones
  • Most numerous in children (up to 21) of bone
    marrow in infants and declines to lt5 after 16
  • Have been observed in reactive lymph nodes and in
    peripheral blood
  • Usually TdT negative
  • Other conditions can increase the number in
    adults
  • Regenerating marrow following chemotherapy
  • Autoimmune diseases
  • Congenital cytopenias
  • Lymphomas (usually stage 3)
  • Neuroblastomas
  • AIDS

39
Hematogone Immunophenotype
  • Always positive for
  • Progenitor cell markers CD34 and CD38
  • CD19
  • Dim CD22

40
Hematogone Immunophenotype
  • Maturation markers
  • Stage 1(red)
  • Positive TdT and Bright CD10
  • Stage 2(blue)
  • Moderate CD10, dim CD20, and variable sIG
  • Stage 3(Yellow)
  • Dim to moderate CD10, moderate to bright CD20,
    and variable sIG

41
Hematogones vs. ALL
RedLymphoblasts YellowHematogones
Concurrent CD34 and CD20 Abberant over-expression
of markers (eg. CD10)
42
References
  • http//biology.berkeley.edu/crl/flow_cytometry_bas
    ic.html
  • Gervasi F, Lo Verso R, Giambanco C, Cardinale G,
    Tomaselli C, Pagnucco G. Flow cytometric
    immunophenotyping analysis of patterns of antigen
    expression in non-Hodgkin's B cell lymphoma in
    samples obtained from different anatomic
    sites.Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2004 Dec1028457-62.
  • Kroft SH, Asplund SL, McKenna RW, Karandikar NJ.
    Haematogones in the peripheral blood of adults a
    four-colour flow cytometry study of 102
    patients.Br J Haematol. 2004 Jul126(2)209-12.
  • S Sava an1, M Büyükavc 2, S Buck1 and Y
    Ravindranath1 . Leukaemia/lymphoma cell
    microparticles in childhood mature B cell
    neoplasms. Journal of Clinical Pathology
    200457651-653.
  • Maloum K, Sutton L, Baudet S, Laurent C, Bonnemye
    P, Magnac C, Merle-Beral H. Novel flow-cytometric
    analysis based on BCD5 subpopulations for the
    evaluation of minimal residual disease in chronic
    lymphocytic leukaemia.Br J Haematol. 2002
    Dec119(4)970-5.
  • Jilani I, O'Brien S, Manshuri T, Thomas DA,
    Thomazy VA, Imam M, Naeem S, Verstovsek S,
    Kantarjian H, Giles F, Keating M, Albitar
    M.Transient down-modulation of CD20 by rituximab
    in patients with chronic lymphocytic
    leukemia.Blood. 2003 Nov 15102(10)3514-20.
    Epub 2003 Jul 31
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