Quantitative analysis of myocardial inflammation by flow cytometry in murine autoimmune myocarditis: correlation with cardiac function

M Afanasyeva, D Georgakopoulos, DF Belardi… - The American journal of …, 2004 - Elsevier
M Afanasyeva, D Georgakopoulos, DF Belardi, AC Ramsundar, JG Barin, DA Kass
The American journal of pathology, 2004Elsevier
Inflammation has been increasingly recognized as an important pathological component of
heart failure. Existing methods of assessing myocardial infiltrate are labor-intensive and
provide data that are difficult to quantify and not representative of the whole heart. As a
result, little effort has been made to systematically assess the components of myocardial
inflammation. We established an alternative method of quantitative assessment of
myocardial inflammation by flow cytometry after enzymatic digestion of hearts to characterize …
Inflammation has been increasingly recognized as an important pathological component of heart failure. Existing methods of assessing myocardial infiltrate are labor-intensive and provide data that are difficult to quantify and not representative of the whole heart. As a result, little effort has been made to systematically assess the components of myocardial inflammation. We established an alternative method of quantitative assessment of myocardial inflammation by flow cytometry after enzymatic digestion of hearts to characterize the infiltrate and study the association between inflammation and cardiac function in murine experimental autoimmune myocarditis. The severity of acute myocarditis uniquely correlated with the proportion of neutrophils, but not T cells, B cells, or macrophages. Both acute and chronic phases were characterized by the presence of CD44high (activated) T cells in the heart, whereas T cells trafficking through normal hearts exhibited CD44low phenotype. During the chronic phase, the proportion of CD4+ T cells was associated with increased left-ventricular volumes and deterioration of systolic function, the hallmarks of dilated cardiomyopathy. We conclude that flow cytometry on uniformly digested mouse hearts provides sensitive and reproducible assessment of myocardial infiltrate and can be used to dissect out the specific role of individual immune components from the overall inflammatory response in the heart.
Elsevier