High-throughput Raman spectroscopy allows ex vivo characterization of murine small intestinal intra-epithelial lymphocytes (IEL)†

in: Analyst (2023)
Guliev, Rustam; Arend, Natalie; Vogler, Tina; Eiserloh, Simone; Wiede, Alexander; Kunert, Timo; Dinkel, Martin; Popp, Jürgen; Schie, Iwan W.; Hildner, Kai; Neugebauer, Ute
T cells are considered to be critical drivers of intestinal inflammation in mice and people. The so called intra-epithelial lymphocyte (IEL) compartment largely consist of T cells. Interestingly, the specific regulation and contribution of IELs in the context of inflammatory bowel disease remains poorly understood, in part due to the lack of appropriate analysis tools. Powerful, label-free methods could ultimately provide access to this cell population and hence give valuable insight into IEL biology and even more to their disease-related functionalities. Raman spectroscopy has demonstrated over the last few years its potential for reliable cell characterization and differentiation, but its utility in regard to IEL exploration remains unknown. To address this question experimentally, we utilized a murine, T cell-driven experimental model system which is accepted to model human gut inflammation. Here, we repopulated the small intestinal IEL compartment (SI IELs) of Rag1-deficient mice endogenously lacking T cells by transferring naïve CD4+ T helper cells intraperitoneally. Using multivariate statistical analysis, high-throughput Raman spectroscopy managed to define a cell subpopulation ex vivo within the SI IEL pool of mice previously receiving T cells in vivo that displayed characteristic spectral features of lymphocytes. Raman data sets matched flow cytometry analyses with the latter identifying T cell receptor (TCR)áâ+ CD4+ T cell population in SI IELs from T cell-transferred mice, but not from control mice, in an abundance comparable to the one detected by Raman spectroscopy. Hence, in this study, we provide experimental evidence for highthroughput Raman spectroscopy to be a novel, future tool to reliably identify and potentially further characterize the T cell pool of small intestinal IELs ex vivo.

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