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Comprehensive cell surface proteomics defines markers of classical, intermediate and non-classical monocytes

Benjamin J. Ravenhill, Lior Soday, Jack W. Houghton, Robin Antrobus, Michael P. Weekes

2020Scientific Reports54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Monocytes are a critical component of the cellular innate immune system, and can be subdivided into classical, intermediate and non-classical subsets on the basis of surface CD14 and CD16 expression. Classical monocytes play the canonical role of phagocytosis, and account for the majority of circulating cells. Intermediate and non-classical cells are known to exhibit varying levels of phagocytosis and cytokine secretion, and are differentially expanded in certain pathological states. Characterisation of cell surface proteins expressed by each subset is informative not only to improve understanding of phenotype, but may also provide biological insights into function. Here we use highly multiplexed Tandem-Mass-Tag (TMT)-based mass spectrometry with selective cell surface biotinylation to characterise the classical monocyte surface proteome, then interrogate the phenotypic differences between each monocyte subset to identify novel protein markers.

Topics & Concepts

ProteomeCD14ProteomicsBiotinylationPhagocytosisMonocyteBiologyCell biologyCD16PhenotypeCellInnate immune systemImmune systemChemistryComputational biologyImmunologyGeneticsBiochemistryGeneCD8CD3Advanced Proteomics Techniques and ApplicationsImmune cells in cancerExtracellular vesicles in disease
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