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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, January 2005, p. 19-27, Vol. 12, No. 1
1071-412X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CDLI.12.1.19-27.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Use of HL-60 Cell Line To Measure Opsonic Capacity of Pneumococcal Antibodies
R. A. Fleck,1*
S. Romero-Steiner,2 and
M. H. Nahm3
National Institute for Biological Standards and Control, South Mimms, Potters Bar, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom,1
Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia,2
Department of Pathology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama3

INTRODUCTION
Here, we review the experiences of the pneumococcal vaccine
community in the adoption of cell lines for bioassays. We have
drawn upon successes and failures in the development of in vitro
functional assays reported by the international vaccine community,
descriptions of the cell line by its originators, and studies
by the leukemia research community into cell differentiation.
Bioassays are increasingly based on cell lines, since they offer
various advantages over using whole animals, including simplicity
of care, ease of standardization, and low cost. For example,
an in vitro toxin neutralization assay is used to determine
the capacity of anti-diphtheria toxin antibodies to neutralize
the cytopathic effect of this toxin on Vero cells (
61). The
capacity of pneumococcal antibodies to opsonize bacteria in
vitro for phagocytes is an important measure of the protective
immunity induced with a pneumococcal vaccine. Studies of pneumococcal
vaccines have revealed various issues important in selecting
cell lines used in the bioassay. This review discusses the lessons
relevant to the adoption of cell lines for bioassays, which
were learned from pneumococcal vaccine studies.
Streptococcus pneumoniae is an important bacterial pathogen responsible for sepsis, meningitis, pneumonia, and otitis media (2). Antibodies to pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide (PS) protect the host by opsonizing pneumococci for phagocytosis by granulocytes and macrophages, and this opsonizing potential has also been associated with vaccine-induced immunoprotection (6, 14, 26, 47, 78). Although the association between vaccine-induced antibody concentration as measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and antibody function (opsonophagocytosis) has been established for children participating in three different vaccine efficacy trials of a pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (47), many studies have shown that antibodies detected by ELISA may lack specificity (20, 22, 62, 96). An ELISA modified to decrease nonspecificity is, however, routinely performed with good specificity (91).
Given that the ability of granulocytes to opsonize pneumococci is the key measure of vaccine-induced immunoprotection, diverse in vitro methods of measuring opsonic capacities of antibodies have been devised; these assays are termed opsonophagocytic assays (OPAs). The most established OPA is the opsonophagocytic killing assay (OPKA), which measures the reduction in the number of viable bacteria in the presence of phagocytes, antibodies, and complement (73). Other OPAs measure the uptake of fluorescent (57) or radiolabeled (87) pneumococci into phagocytes in the presence of antibodies and complement.
All in vitro OPAs require phagocytes, which are commonly obtained from one of two sources. The first source is peripheral blood of normal donors, which provides the most biologically relevant granulocytes but presents several shortcomings. The genetic or clinical status of individual donors will vary, with clear implications for the standardization of an OPA. It is also inconvenient to perform phlebotomy by routine schedules, as donors need to be screened for health conditions and granulocytes must be purified prior to the OPA being performing. In addition, an assay may require a large number of granulocytes, necessitating phlebotomy of large volumes of blood from an individual or smaller volumes pooled from many donors. For these reasons, a promyelocytic cell line has been used to provide phagocytic cells for the OPA. Recently, a number of laboratories have used HL-60 cells, subjected to conditions that promote differentiation towards granulocyte morphology, as phagocytes with varying degrees of success. Here, we review the experience with HL-60 cells and their differentiation into granulocytes for use as effector cells in pneumococcal OPA.

HISTORY OF THE HL-60 CELL LINE
The HL-60 cell line was derived from peripheral blood leukocytes
of a 36-year-old Caucasian female with acute promyelocytic leukemia
(
18). It was among the first long-term suspension cultures of
human myeloid leukemic cells to be established and has been
extensively characterized during the past decades. The original
wild-type HL-60 cell line had several properties of malignant
cells and expressed various oncogenes (
17). The cells formed
tumors in nude mice, predominantly consisting of promyelocytes
and myeloblasts (
33), and grew as colonies in semisolid medium
(methylcellulose and agar), which could be enhanced with various
colony-stimulating factors and with increasing passage (
33).
Consequently, multiple sublines with limited differentiation
potential have been developed (
10), including lines resistant
to chemical inducers of differentiation (
43,
58) and eosinophilic
sublines incapable of neutrophilic or monocytic differentiation
(
85). Unless otherwise specified, we will refer to the wild-type
HL-60 cells in this review.
There is no reported evidence by the originators of HL-60 (33), the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) (Rockville, Md.), or the European Collection of Cell Cultures (ECACC) (Porton Down, United Kingdom) that HL-60 cells are infected by pathogenic viruses including Epstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus, or herpes simplex virus. The Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen (DSMZ) also reports that the HL-60 cell line (DSMZ ACC 3) is negative for Epstein-Barr virus, hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus, human herpes virus 8, human immunodeficiency virus, and human T-cell leukemia virus types 1 and 2. HL-60 has recently been reported to contain a sequence similar to that of the human endogenous retrovirus H/F-expressing cell line Reh (ATCC CRL-8286) (70), although there is currently no evidence that human endogenous retroviruses are expressed.
Consistent with the origins of HL-60, cytological studies have found HL-60 cells to be myeloblastic or promyelocytic. In culture, cells are ovoid or round but occasionally express pseudopods and are heterogeneous in size (9 to 25 µm in diameter). HL-60 cells have large round nuclei, which are occasionally binucleate with distinct margins, fine chromatin, and two to four nucleoli (33, 85). The cytoplasm is deeply basophilic with prominent multiple azurophilic granules. Cells stain positively with periodic acid-Schiff reagent and occasionally for acid phosphatase, characteristics of mature in vivo granulocytes. HL-60 cells do not, however, express alkaline phosphatase or
-naphtol AS-D acetate (nonspecific) esterase, characteristic of in vivo-derived neutrophilic granulocytes or myeloid cells, and some cells can resemble megakaryocytes and erythrocyte precursors (17).

DIFFERENTIATION OF HL-60
Critical to the successful adoption of a cell line for bioassay
is the reproducibility of the function of the cell within the
assay itself. In the OPA, the effector cell must first be induced
to differentiate to a phagocyte. Size, morphology, and the extent
of heterogeneity among cultured HL-60 cells suggest that they
may spontaneously differentiate in vitro (
18). Approximately
5 to 10% of HL-60 cells appear to be mature myelocytes; many
resemble mononuclear phagocytes, metamyelocytes, banded cells,
or fully segmented neutrophils. Similarly, about 5 to 10% of
cultured HL-60 cells have properties of differentiated granulocytes,
such as phagocytic ability and the ability to respond to chemotactic
peptides (e.g.,
N-formylmethionyl-leucine) (
33). The effector
HL-60 cells for an OPA can also be regulated by induction of
differentiation towards three distinct myeloid cell lineages
(monocytic, eosinophilic, and granulocytic), depending on the
environmental conditions and the chemical inducers used (
17,
66).
The multipotentiality of this cell line to differentiate into various cell lineages has been a research subject since its discovery. Environmental conditions such as pH and multiple chemical inducers can greatly facilitate the differentiation of HL-60 cell lines into various myeloid lineages (17, 19, 59, 66, 74). These chemicals generally arrest the cell cycle at the time of induction of differentiation. For example, sodium butyrate induces monocytic differentiation (8) and N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) and other polar compounds induce granulocytic differentiation (19). Additional inducers such as retinoic acid, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), and dibutryl cyclic AMP have been also reported to induce granulocytic differentiation. Many factors can affect optimal differentiation; conditions for differentiation depend primarily on the concentration of the inducer, the time of exposure, and the relative proportion of cells in different segments of the cell cycle (17, 19). Continuous exposure to these inducers is not necessary (74); even a short exposure may be sufficient (82).
The observations of spontaneous differentiation, selection of sublines, and changes in colony-forming tendencies with increasing passage (33) enforce the requirement for robust control of the cell line and its processes. Bioassays by their very nature require standardization, and unnecessary variation must be avoided. Therefore, for a standardized bioassay it is critical to standardize and optimize differentiation conditions to provide reproducible yields of granulocytes suitable for use as effector cells within the OPA. Optimized conditions have been described by various authors for differentiation into neutrophils and these include 1.25% (vol/vol) of DMSO in a period of 5 to 7 days (10, 19), 100 mM DMF in a period of 5 days (57, 72, 73), or 0.1 µM all-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA) in a period of 5 days (11). In some cases, comparisons between inducers indicate they can be synergistic and are more effective when they are used in combination (11, 13). For instance, HL-60 cells widely available in Europe (ECACC 98070106) differentiate into functional neutrophils better when they are exposed to a mixture of ATRA, 1
,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 (vitamin D3), and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (29).

SOURCES OF HL-60 CELL LINES, WILD TYPE, AND SUB-LINES
Reflecting its versatility and long history, the wild-type HL-60
cell line and its various sublines can be obtained from multiple
sources (Table
1). The wild type (ATCC CCL-240) is available
from ATCC, whose stock was obtained at passage 8 and is distributed
at passage 21. The main European source of HL-60 (ECACC 98070106)
was deposited at ECACC by C. Bunce of the University of Birmingham,
Birmingham, United Kingdom, and it is believed that the original
seed stock was a gift from the originator. The seed stock (DSMZ
ACC 3) held at DSMZ, was deposited by E. Porfiri of the Royal
Free Hospital, London, United Kingdom. Additional European sources
include the Interlab Cell Line Collection, Genoa, Italy (ICLC
HTL95010, whose deposit was obtained from ECACC, and Istituto
Zooprofilattico Sperimentale, Brescia, Italy (IZSBS BS TCL25),
which is restricted to Italian researchers. ATCC cell lines
are also distributed under license through LGC, Ltd., London,
United Kingdom. Although exact details regarding the passage
level of the original deposits and passage number banked are
difficult to determine, it is likely that the original seed
stocks of HL-60 deposited by researchers other than the originating
laboratory and retained at ECACC and DSMZ are at a higher passage
level than those at ATCC. On-line catalogue collections of HL-60
cells may be found at several sources (
3,
23,
27,
44).
Subclones of HL-60 with slightly different biological properties
are available (Table
1). While some of these sublines can differentiate
easily in the direction of monocytes or neutrophils (
10), many
sublines may not differentiate into phagocytes and thus not
be suitable for OPAs. For example, sublines ML60 m2, m4, Sp1,
Ast3, and Ast25 require higher concentrations of DMSO to induce
neutrophil differentiation (
10); clone 15 HL-60 (ATCC CRL-1964)
readily undergoes eosinophilic differentiation when treated
with butyric acid but does not differentiate well into granulocytes
(
12) (Table
1). An HL-60 subline resistant to retinoic acid
(ATRA) has also been described by Grillier et al. (
39) as having
late-passage cultures with increased tolerance to DMF and an
inability to differentiate with either DMF or ATRA (
29).

HL-60 CELL LINE MAINTENANCE AND PASSAGE
HL-60 cells require simple maintenance in vitro and grow as
single-cell suspension cultures without the tendency to clump
or adhere to plastic or glass (
18). Although the cell line's
doubling times were originally reported to be 55 to 60 h (
18),
once it is established, cell density doubles every 24 h in an
actively growing culture, although doubling time is about 72
h immediately after recovery from the frozen stock. HL-60 cells
may be propagated at 37°C under 5% CO
2 in air, in Iscove's
modified Dulbecco's medium with 4 mM
L-glutamine adjusted to
contain 1.5 g of sodium bicarbonate/liter and 20% fetal bovine
serum (FBS). Initially, S. J. Collins generated this cell line
by growth in RPMI 1640 (Gibco Ltd., Carlsbad, Calif.) supplemented
with 15% fetal calf serum (Flow Labs, Irvine, Scotland) and
gentamicin (50 µg/ml) (
18). Maintenance of HL-60 is possible
in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 2 mM
L-Glutamine and 10 to 20%
heat-inactivated FBS from various sources (HyClone, Logan, Utah;
JRH Biosciences, Lenexa, Kans.) (
29,
72). Under these conditions,
HL-60 cultures can be maintained by diluting the cells with
a fresh medium to a density of 10
5 viable cells/ml when the
cell density reaches 10
6 cells/ml. HL-60 cell lines may even
be maintained on serum-free medium as originally described by
Breitman et al., (
9) or by culture in media such as UltraCulture
(BioWhittaker, Walkersville, Md.) with 4 mM
L-glutamine adjusted
to contain 1.5 g of sodium bicarbonate/liter (G. N. Stacey [NIBSC,
Potters Bar, United Kingdom], personal communication). However,
these HL-60 cells may differentiate poorly (
5,
36) and may require
a special mixture of chemicals for differentiation (
13).
While the HL-60 cell line is very simple to culture, it is predisposed to differentiate into nonproliferating cells or to a subline. Thus, meticulous attention to its handling, culture, and passage procedures is required. Cell concentration should not be allowed to exceed 106 cells/ml. High pH (pH 7.6 to 8.0) culture conditions can favor the differentiation of HL-60 cells into eosinophils rather than neutrophils (28) and thereby affect the performance of the cells in an OPA. This culture condition may inadvertently arise when the CO2 supply to incubators is interrupted; effects of changes in pH (dissolved CO2) must be considered in the application of HL-60 within a standardized OPA. Romero-Steiner et al. (73) reported difficulty in obtaining differentiated granulocytes for opsonophagocytosis of pneumococci in ATCC CCL-240 at passages above 35. This restriction was resolved by using higher concentrations of FBS (20%) and daily maintenance of the cell line with at least 20% carryover of tissue culture medium from the undifferentiated stock into the differentiation culture aliquot (57, 72). This culture regime may provide a benefit through the transfer in the carryover medium of hepatocyte growth factor-like products naturally secreted by HL-60 cells (67). Distribution of frozen undifferentiated seed stocks to laboratories wishing to perform bioassays is also preferable to shipping live cultures, as this is best practice among tissue culture distributors and minimizes risk from contamination and/or selection pressures. Standardized conditions for freezing of differentiated granulocytes to be used directly in OPA are under investigation (J. Martinez [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga.], personal communication).

STORAGE OF HL-60 CELLS TO PROVIDE FUTURE SEED STOCKS
Long-term storage of HL-60 cells must be accomplished by cryopreservation
in liquid nitrogen of the undifferentiated cell stock at a high
density (5
x 10
6 cells/ml) in RPMI 1640-based medium supplemented
with 10% glycerol or DMSO while the cell stock is at low passage.
The addition of exogenous cryoprotective compounds such as glycerol
or DMSO modulates elevations in salt concentration during freezing
(
66) and protects cells from osmotic stress (
32,
60,
71). Some
cryoprotectants (e.g., DMSO) may also induce cellular differentiation
(
10,
19) and are toxic, reducing cell viability after thawing
and requiring rapid removal upon thawing. Cell distributors
recommend thawing the 1-ml cell stock within 1 min in a 37°C
water bath and immediately adding fresh tissue culture (20 ml)
medium to dilute the cryoprotective compound. Alternatively,
the cryopreservative can be removed by centrifugation of the
thawed cell suspension. If the dilution method is chosen, the
medium can be replaced by fresh growth medium after overnight
incubation; as cells divide, the volume can be adjusted to expand
the cell culture. Differentiation into granulocytes should be
attempted once the cells have adjusted to the growth conditions
and active cell growth is obtained (i.e., daily doubling of
cell numbers). This process takes 2 to 3 weeks, on average (
64).

MONITORING IN VITRO DIFFERENTIATION
As HL-60 cells differentiate; they cease proliferation, begin
to express new genes and molecules, undergo morphological changes,
and then die by apoptosis (
79). Such changes, including expression
of complement receptor 1 (CR1; C3b receptor), have been suggested
as indicators of successful differentiation (
29,
57,
73) and
can be monitored by microscopic, flow cytometric, and molecular
techniques. Morphological alterations during differentiation
include shrinkage in cell size, decreased nuclear-cytoplasmic
ratio, increased nuclear pyknosis and segmentation, decreased
cytoplasmic basophilia, replacement of the coarse azurophilic
granules with smaller specific granules (
17), and alterations
in gene and protein expression along macrophage (
48,
76) and
granulocytic (
45) lineages. Undifferentiated HL-60 cells have
a generally rounded morphology when viewed by scanning electron
microscopy with short- to medium-length pseudopodia and occasional
ruffles; they demonstrate clear changes in morphology (increased
ruffling and flattening) following differentiation (Fig.
1)
(
29).
Opsonization involves binding of bacterial serotype-specific
antibodies to the PS capsule of pneumococci, which in turn fix
complement onto the bacterial surface (
90,
93); recurrent pathogenic
infections have been associated with natural or causal deficiencies
in C3 (
31,
83). Thus, successful differentiation of HL-60 for
an OPA may be measured by the acquisition of attributes of a
phagocyte such as receptor sites, which recognize opsonins.
Phagocytic cells, primarily granulocytes, recognize the Fc portions
of the bound antibody and the C3b and iC3b complement deposited
onto the bacterial surface via specific cell receptors. For
the determination of vaccine-induced opsonophagocytic capacity,
the primary receptors of interest are the Fc

types I, II, and
III. Fc

RI (CD64) is the high affinity receptor for immunoglobulin
G1 (IgG1), IgG3, and IgG4; Fc

RII (CD32) is the low-affinity
receptor for aggregated IgG1, IgG2, and IgG3; and Fc

RIII (CD16)
is the low-affinity receptor for IgG1 and IgG3. In addition,
polymorphisms that result in different binding affinities due
to race and genetic lineage have been documented (
89). Of particular
interest for vaccine-induced antibodies is the Fc

RII high responder-low
responder described by Sanders et al. and Ernst et al. (
25,
77). These differences can be revealed by use of specific monoclonal
antibodies or by analysis of the genetic transcripts (
69,
89).
The presence of the lower-affinity receptors in granulocytes
has been associated with lower levels of phagocytosis in the
absence of complement (
77) and would appear to make this the
better option if the assay were to be tailored to be complement
independent. Although Fc receptors are important in opsonization,
the complement-dependent opsonophagocytic pathway remains central
to the clearance of
S. pneumoniae in vivo (
42,
63); complement
receptors for C3b (CR1 and CD35) and iC3b (CR3 and CD11b) are
the primary receptors mediating opsonophagocytosis of pneumococci
and other encapsulated bacteria (
37).
The presence of complement receptors in HL-60 cells and HL-60 granulocytes has been previously documented (4, 29, 46, 73, 75, 89), and their presence may be studied with commercially available antibodies against CD11b (iC3b receptor and CR3
-chain), CD18 (ß-chain of lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 [LFA-1]) and CD54 (intracellular LFA-1 adhesion molecule 1 [ICAM-1]; ligand for Mac-1). Expression of CD11b, which binds noncovalently to CD18 to form the Mac-1 integrin (15), is a useful marker of granulocytic differentiation and of suitable cell lines for OPA (29, 32, 38, 73). Similarly, the
-chains CD11a and CD11c can bind to CD18 to form two other ß2 integrins (LFA-1 family) (1). Because of its simplicity and reproducibility, flow cytometric analysis is the practical way of monitoring the differentiation of HL-60 cells to obtain granulocytes with phagocytic function. CD markers may also be employed to identify monocytes and by deduction neutrophils. For example, CD14 (Leu-M3) is specific for monocytes and macrophages, and CD33 recognizes various myeloid cells, including monocytes and macrophages (8, 24). Differentiation of HL-60 can be readily identified by monitoring the expression of cell surface markers and may therefore be used to quality control the effector cells. Useful markers are summarized in Table 2.
Even after expression of these markers, the relative activity
of certain receptors and biochemical pathways can be further
modulated (
80) as documented in the case of peripheral blood
neutrophils (
21). Differentiated granulocytes can be further
activated by the addition of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating
factor (
66), C-reactive protein (
16), or phorbol 12-myristate
13-acetate to observe the reduction of nitroblue tetrazolium
(
73) or by coinduction with dexamethasone and DMF to induce
higher activity of the chemotactic peptide receptors (
80). Differentiated
granulocytes have increased levels of protein kinase C and can
release arachidonic acid upon stimulation with phorbol 12-myristate
13-acetateand Ca
2+ (
95). A recent report also indicates that
heat-killed pneumococci (serogroup 3) can up-regulate the surface
expression of CR3 (CD11b) in a time-dependent fashion prior
to uptake of pneumococci by the neutrophils (
94).

PERFORMANCE OF HL-60 IN SEVERAL OPAs
HL-60 cells differentiated with DMF into granulocytes were used
as phagocytes by Romero-Steiner et al. (
73) in a complement-dependent
OPKA that measures the capacity of anti-capsule antibodies to
opsonize live pneumococci in a single serotype-specific reaction.
This assay required the counting the numbers of CFU that remained
viable after the granulocytes phagocytosed the target bacteria
in vitro. HL-60 granulocytes are used in a 400:1 effector-to-target
cell ratio, and the viability of the differentiated cells can
be as low as 50% without affecting the opsonophagocytic titer.
In this assay, the OPKA titer is defined as the serum dilution
with

50% killing of the bacterial inoculum (1,000 bacteria/well).
This method mimics the opsonophagocytic process occurring in
vivo and has been used for many years. Recently, an evaluation
of this methodology indicated that this assay has a high degree
of reproducibility across multiple laboratories (
72).
OPKA has several disadvantages. One is that this method requires tedious colony counting, a difficulty that has hindered wide adoption of this method for testing a large number of samples. Kim et al. overcame the colony-counting problem by colony enhancement with dye and automated colony counting (50). Alternatively, a chromogenic modification has been developed for the faster determination of titers (54). Another disadvantage is that the OPKA has many manual steps and requires at least 40 µl of serum sample to test a single serotype. This problem was resolved by development of a multiplexed OPKA with antibiotic-resistant pneumococci and allowing the simultaneous testing of two serotypes (50, 65). More recently, Bogaert et al. demonstrated that a multiplexed OPKA could handle seven serotypes simultaneously (7). These improvements in the OPKA are likely to increase its adoption and automation, placing greater demands on the provision of phagocytic effector cells and thus the requirement for a comprehensive understanding of the properties and behavior of the HL-60 cell line.
HL-60 differentiated granulocytes have also been used in single and multiplex flow cytometric OPAs for pneumococcus (56, 57). The method relies on phagocytic uptake of fluorescent but killed S. pneumoniae (57) or fluorescent particles coated with pneumococcal capsular PSs by HL-60 granulocytes (55). HL-60 cells are highly efficient at the phagocytosis of fixed pneumococci or PS-coated bead particles in this assay configuration, where the effector-to-target cell ratio is reversed to 1:2 or 1:4. The flow cytometric OPAs provide several advantages. (i) The assay can be semiautomated for rapid analysis of a large number of samples. (ii) It is insensitive to antibiotics in the serum sample, allowing studies of sera derived from individuals treated with antibiotics. (iii) Up to four different targets can be tested simultaneously for OPA titer determination. (iv) It uses smaller numbers of HL-60 phagocytes. (v) This approach may overcome some of the technical difficulties of growing and maintaining consistent target S. pneumoniae. Also, phagocytosis by a specific subset of phagocytes can be determined by tagging phagocytic cells with a cell surface marker of differentiation, e.g., CD11b (29). However, these flow cytometric OPAs have not been extensively implemented or evaluated in a multilaboratory study and only measure binding (and/or phagocytosis) of the bacteria and not killing. Although nonkilling assays have been developed, additional validation is required to show that uptake of beads is equivalent to opsonization, uptake, and killing of bacteria. If a given nonkilling assay was shown to be an efficient surrogate of bacterial killing, there would be potential for its use as a correlate of protection.

HL-60, A PROBLEM CELL LINE?
As HL-60 cells became widely used in many different laboratories
as a source of phagocytes, contradictory experiences were reported.
A number of laboratories in the United States had varying levels
of success in using HL-60 cells for OPA. In contrast, several
experienced European laboratories in various countries reported
difficulties in achieving reproducible differentiation of HL-60
cells into granulocytes with DMF. Although some European laboratories
were successful in using HL-60 (
72), these diverse international
experiences became a concern in adopting the HL-60 derived granulocytes
as the effector cells for pneumococcal OPAs.
A number of hypotheses have been put forward to explain these differences, including differences in the source and quality of serum used in cell cultures to differences between the passage procedures adopted between laboratories. It is likely that the differences between the laboratories in the United States and Europe may actually be intrinsic to the seed source of HL-60 employed. Reports of successful differentiation of HL-60 with DMF are primarily from United States sources, where seed stocks were obtained from ATCC, a cell line deposited at passage 8. In contrast, many of the European seed stocks were sourced from ECACC and were almost certainly derived from an accession of higher passage than those derived directly from ATCC. In addition, it is possible that HL-60 cell lines may have partially differentiated in individual laboratories and therefore become less useful as phagocytes (40). Differences between the responses of two different HL-60 wild types (ATCC CCL-240 and ECACC 98070106) following induction of differentiation with DMF or ATRA have also been observed (29, 30, 34, 49). Thus, for the successful adoption of an OPA based upon HL-60-derived granulocytes, each laboratory must obtain the "correct" HL-60 cell line. It is also critical that source, storage, shipping, maintenance, and differentiation methods are clearly stated in any standardized OPA protocol(s).

ALTERNATIVES TO WILD-TYPE HL-60
Because of the initial conflicting experience with HL-60, several
other cell lines were considered that are capable of differentiating
into either granulocytic or monocytic lineages (
53,
88) by the
addition of chemical inducers in a fashion similar to that of
HL-60 (Table
3). At the moment, these cell lines have not been
evaluated for their use in pneumococcal OPAs to the same extent
as HL-60 cells have. One cell line, NB-4, was found to efficiently
differentiate into granulocytes (
29). As the OPA is designed
to determine antibody titer, any functional phagocyte capable
of preferentially phagocytosing opsonized pneumococci or PS-coated
beads could be used to determine opsonic titers, as long as
the OPA titers were comparable to those obtained with the more
widely used HL-60 granulocytes (
72). However, poorly differentiated
cultures or cultures with low viability are likely to be less
desirable for use within a standardized assay, as factors which
contribute to uncontrolled variations between assays must be
controlled if the bioassay is to be considered standardized.
In preliminary studies, differentiated NB-4 cells (
53) generated
opsonic titers comparable to those derived by DMF-differentiated
HL-60 cells (ATCC CCL-240) (
30,
35). NB-4 cells have a 72- to
96-h differentiation period with opsonic activity after 72 h
of differentiation and as early as 48 h after induction of differentiation
(
30,
35). More-rapid induction of differentiation of the effector
cell line (HL-60 or NB-4) may be considered beneficial, as it
reduces the total time to perform the bioassay. In addition,
a single source of cell line (e.g., NB-4) may be advantageous,
as it reduces the potential for variation between different
commercially sourced HL-60 cell lines. Another potential advantage
for OPA in the absence of exogenous complement is that in contrast
to HL-60 which is homozygous for the arginine R131 allele of
the low-affinity Fc

RII (CD32) receptor, which binds the IgG2
antibody isotope, NB-4 is heterozygous for the point mutation
and exhibits both histidine H131 and arginine R131 alleles (
34).
This difference in receptor affinity may make the NB-4 cell
line less complement dependent for use in an OPA.
Other approaches for new phagocytes include the genetic engineering
of mouse fibroblasts to express molecules necessary for phagocytosis
(e.g., CR3 and the Fc receptor). This has been attempted without
success with 3T6 fibroblasts transfected with Fc

IIa cDNA (
92).
To overcome difficulties associated with a high percentage of
cell death during differentiation (
79), monitoring of cell viability
of the effector cells is crucial to maintain their efficiency
in OPAs. Prevention of cell death following differentiation
with
bcl-2 transgene manipulations or chemical inhibition of
apoptosis could increase effector efficiency and yield. In addition,
genes carrying the higher-affinity Fc

IIR allele could be introduced
to further tailor the specificity of the OPA.

SUMMARY
From a practical point of view, a single source for the HL-60
cell line is needed, as well as standardized culture and differentiation
conditions. Suggested conditions for a standardized OPKA protocol
are available online (
64). This site is updated periodically.
Despite confusing experiences in the past, the HL-60 cell line
has been extensively characterized and is readily available;
its use has been described for the evaluation of pneumococcal
vaccine induced anti-capsular antibodies by standardized OPKA,
and it remains a good candidate cell line. Perhaps a single
distribution center for the cell line may be established to
help the pneumococcal research community. In the meantime, any
laboratory interested in OPA must obtain the correct HL-60 cell
line from a qualified source (e.g., ATCC).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We acknowledge the encouragement by E. Griffith, who pushed
for this article, G. Carlone, and I. Feavers. We also acknowledge
the WHO and NIH, who supported the standardization of OPKA.
The work was supported by NIH (NO1-AI-30021) to M.H.N.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: National Institute of Biological Standards and Control, Blanche Lane, South Mimms, Potters Bar, Hertfordshire EN6 3QG, United Kingdom. Phone: 44 (0) 1707 641000. Fax: 44 (0) 1707 646730. E-mail:
rfleck{at}nibsc.ac.uk.


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