Abstract
By using the recently established culture system that reproduces the terminal differentiation process of connective tissue-type mast cells, we found significant transcriptional induction of CD44. As CD44 is a primary receptor for hyaluronan (HA), which is one of the major extracellular matrix components, we investigated the role of CD44 in cutaneous mast cells. When co-cultured with fibroblasts, mouse bone marrow-derived cultured mast cells (BMMCs) were found to form clusters in an HA-dependent manner. As compared with BMMCs derived from the wild-type mice, those from the CD44−/− mice exhibited impaired growth during the co-cultured period. Furthermore, in the peritoneal cavities and ear tissues, mature mast cells were fewer in number in the CD44−/− mice than in the wild-type mice. We investigated roles of CD44 in mast cell proliferation by reconstituting BMMCs into the tissues of mast cell-deficient, KitW/KitW-v mice, and found that the number of metachromatic cells upon acidic toluidine blue staining in the tissues transplanted with CD44−/− BMMCs was not significantly changed for 10 weeks, whereas that in the tissues transplanted with the CD44+/+ BMMCs was significantly increased. These results suggest that CD44 plays a crucial role in the regulation of the cutaneous mast cell number.
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Main
Mast cells have the potential to produce diverse arrays of mediators, and release them in the context of the responses, in which local mast cells are involved.1, 2 Mast cells originate from hematopoietic progenitor cells and undergo terminal differentiation in tissues where they are ultimately resident.3 As heterogeneity of tissue mast cells arise as a result of differences in the microenvironment that affects the process of the terminal differentiation, extensive investigation of the maturation process is required for precise understanding of the roles of tissue mast cells. Although several mast cell lines and IL-3-dependent bone marrow-derived cultured mast cells (BMMCs) have been used as models to investigate the process of mast cell activation and subsequent production of proinflammatory mediators, these models have limitations in analyzing functions specific to mature mast cells. Hence, recent studies have often employed the mast cell knock-in models using the mast cell-deficient mice, such as WBB6F1-KitW/KitW-v (KitW/KitW-v) and C57BL/6-KitW-sh/KitW-sh (KitW-sh/KitW-sh), to investigate the roles of mature mast cells in vivo.1
By modifying the co-culturing method of BMMCs together with fibroblasts in the presence of stem cell factor (SCF), we have recently established a culture system for development of mature mast cells, which exhibit properties characteristic of connective tissue-type mast cells (CTMCs), such as degranulation induced by cationic secretagogues, Safranin-positive granules, and high levels of mast cell protease expression.4 We then investigated the gene expression profile during the culture period and identified a cluster of candidate genes, which have potentials to modulate mast cell maturation. Among these genes, whose expression levels are upregulated, we focused on CD44 in the current study.
An array of studies has revealed that CD44 is involved in various cellular responses, such as adhesion to the extracellular matrix, migration, cytokine synthesis, and proliferation.5, 6, 7 As CD44 is a surface receptor for hyaluronan (HA), which is one of the major components of the extracellular matrix in the cutaneous tissues,8 we speculated that CD44 plays some roles in the terminal differentiation of mast cells in the cutaneous tissues. Cutaneous mast cells have recently received much attention as one of the essential immune modulators. For example, TNF-α derived from the cutaneous mast cells was found to be involved in lymph node hypertrophy upon bacterial infection and in the migration of Langerhans cells to the draining lymph nodes in response to bacterial peptidoglycan.9, 10 Cutaneous mast cells are also crucial for appropriate peripheral tolerance to skin allografts.11
In this study, we investigated the roles of CD44, during the terminal differentiation of mast cells. We used two approaches to determine the function of CD44 in mast cells: one is the SCF-dependent co-culture system of BMMCs with fibroblasts and the other is a reconstitution system of mast cells into the KitW/KitW-v mice. We show here that CD44 is involved in the proliferation of mast cells during their terminal differentiation in cutaneous tissues.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Mice
Specific-pathogen-free, 8-week-old female Balb/c mice and 6- to 8-week-old male WBB6F1-KitW/KitW-v mice were obtained from Japan SLC (Hamamatsu, Japan), and all mice were kept in a specific pathogen-free animal facility at Kyoto University. The CD44+/− mice12 backcrossed for 6–10 generations to C57BL/6 were bred to generate the CD44+/+ and CD44−/− mice. All animal experiments were performed according to the Guidelines for Animal Experiments of Kyoto University and were approved by the Committee for Animal Experiments.
Materials
The following materials were purchased from the sources indicated: hyaluronidase from bovine testis, and an anti-dinitrophenyl (DNP) IgE (clone SPE-7) from Sigma-Aldrich (St Louis, MO, USA); an anti-CD44 antibody (clone KM81) from Cedarlane (Burlington, ON, Canada); an anti-CD44 antibody (clone KM201) from Southern Biotech (Birmingham, AL, USA); a rat IgG2a antibody from BioLegend (San Diego, CA, USA); a horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-mouse IgG and anti-rat IgG antibodies from DAKO (Glostrup, Denmark); an anti-CD16/32 (2.4G2), an FITC-conjugated anti-mouse IgE, and a phycoerythrin-conjugated anti-c-kit antibody from BD Biosciences (San Diego, CA, USA); an anti-actin and an FITC-conjugated anti-CD44 antibody (clone KM201) from Chemicon (Temecula, CA, USA); an RNeasy mini kit from Qiagen (Valencia, CA, USA); M-MLV reverse transcriptase, an Alexa546-conjugated anti-rat IgG antibody, and 293FT cells from Invitrogen (Carlsbad, CA, USA); LightCycler-Fast Start DNA Master SYBR Green I from Roche Diagnostics (Mannheim, Germany); an ECL kit from GE Healthcare (Uppsala, Sweden); biotinylated HA-binding protein (bHABP); an HA determination kit from Seikagaku Corp. (Tokyo, Japan); FITC-labeled avidin from Vector Laboratories (Burlingame, UK); and [3H]thymidine (20 Ci/mmol) from PerkinElmer (Boston, MA, USA). All other chemicals were commercial products of the reagent grade.
Preparation of BMMCs and Co-Culture with Swiss 3T3 Cells
Preparation of BMMCs was performed as described elsewhere using 10 ng/ml IL-3 instead of the WEHI-conditioned medium.13 The method for development of the CTMC-like cultured mast cells was reported earlier.4 Briefly, BMMCs were co-cultured with mitomycin C-treated Swiss 3T3 cells in the presence of the recombinant mouse SCF (100 ng/ml). The subculture was performed every 4 days. Overall >80% of the viable mast cells were confirmed to be mature mast cells, as assessed by staining with Safranin-O at day 16.
Quantitative RT-PCR Analysis
Total RNAs were isolated from the cultured mast cells using an RNeasy Mini Kit, according to the manufacturer's instruction. Total RNAs were reverse-transcribed using the M-MLV reverse transcriptase and amplified by PCR using a primer offset for GAPDH or CD44 as follows: GAPDH, 5′-TGAACGGGAAGCTCACTGG-3′ (forward) and 5′-TCCACCACCCTGTTGCTGTA-3′ (reverse); and CD44, 5′-TTGGGGACTTTGCCTC-3′ (forward) and 5′-CAGATAGCGTTGGGATG-3′ (reverse).
Immunoblot Analysis
Immunoblot analysis was performed as described earlier.13 An antibody against actin (1:1000) or CD44 (1:200, clone KM201) was used as the primary antibody.
Flow Cytometry
Mast cells in the ear tissues were enriched as described earlier.14 The flow cytometric analysis was performed as described earlier with FACSCalibur (Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ, USA) equipped with the CELLQUEST software.15 The dead cell population was gated out by propidium iodide staining.
Immunofluorescence Staining
The cultured cells were gently rinsed with PBS, fixed with 2% paraformaldehyde, and incubated with the biotinylated HA-binding protein (5 μg/ml, bHABP) and an anti-CD44 antibody (KM81, 1:500) in the presence of 1% bovine serum albumin overnight at 4 °C. The slides were washed and incubated with FITC-labeled avidin (1:500) and an Alexa546-conjugated anti-rat IgG antibody (1:1000) for 1 h. The fluorescent images were obtained using a fluorescence microscope Nikon Eclipse TE300 (Nikon, Tokyo, Japan) and analyzed using the IPLab 3.5.5/J software. The differential interference contrast microscopy (DIC) images were obtained using the same system. The confocal images were obtained with a confocal laser scanning microscope (LSM5 Pascal; Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) with C-Apochromat × 63/1.2 and analyzed using the LSM5 Pascal software.
Measurement of HA
The concentrations of HA in the medium were determined using the ELISA-like system for HA with bHABP, according to the manufacturer's instruction.
Measurement of Histamine
Mast cells were lysed in PBS containing 2 M NaCl and 0.5% Triton X-100 at 4 °C. The lysate of mast cells and the ear tissues were centrifuged at 10 000 g for 30 min at 4 °C. The resultant supernatant was subjected to the assays for histamine as described earlier.13
Cell Proliferation Assay
Cell proliferation was evaluated by measuring [3H]thymidine incorporation for 4 h. [3H]thymidine (20 Ci/mmol) was added to the culture 20 h after the addition of IL-3 or SCF. In case of the measurement of the cell growth of co-cultured cells, the cells were starved for SCF for 6 h and then cultured in the presence of SCF and [3H]thymidine for 4 h. The cellular radioactivity was measured by a liquid scintillation counter.
Counting of the Tissue Mast Cells
Thin ear sections (7 μm) were fixed with Carnoy's solution followed by staining with acidic toluidine blue in 0.6 N HCl for 5 s. The number of metachromatic cells was counted.
Mast Cell Reconstitution in the Tissues of the W/WV Mice
BMMCs were injected into the peritoneal cavity (2 × 106 cells/mouse) or ear cutaneous tissues (1 × 106 cells/ear) of the KitW/KitW-v mice.
Statistical Analysis
Data are presented as the means±s.e.m. Statistical significance for comparisons between groups was determined using Student's paired t-test or ANOVA. Additional comparisons were made with Dunnet's multiple comparison test for comparison with the control groups or the Tukey–Kramer multiple comparison test for all pairs of column comparison.
RESULTS
Induction of CD44 in Mast Cells Co-Cultured with Fibroblasts
Transcriptional upregulation of CD44 was confirmed in BMMCs during the co-culture with Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts in the presence of SCF (Figure 1a). The CD44 induction was also confirmed at both the protein level and the cell surface expression level (Figure 1b and c). Although CD44 protein was also detected in fibroblasts, their expression levels were much lower than those in mast cells during the co-culture period (Figure 1b and data not shown).
HA-Dependent Cluster Formation of the Cultured Mast Cells
During the co-culture period, the majority of BMMCs were found to form clusters, which appeared around the third day after every subculture (Figure 2a). As Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts were reported to produce a set of extracellular matrix components including HA,16 we speculated that HA is involved in the formation of these clusters. As expected, these clusters were rapidly and completely disrupted upon treatment with hyaluronidase (Figure 2b), indicating the essential role of HA in the cluster formation. Visualization of HA in the co-culture system using the biotinylated HA-binding protein (bHABP) revealed that HA formed fibrous networks, which developed in close proximity to the mast cells, which were immunoreactive to an anti-CD44 antibody (Figure 2c and d). Confocal microscopy showed that the HA network was bound to mast cells (Figure 2f–h). Three-dimensional images revealed that the cluster was formed by the connection of individual mast cells by the extracellular matrix containing HA, and that the majority of mast cells were not homotypically aggregated (Supplementary Material 1). Although fluorescent dye-conjugated avidin was found to bind to mast cell granules,17 no detectable signals were found in the experiments performed without bHABP (data not shown). We then identified the cells that produce HA in the co-culture system. A significant level of HA was detected in the day 4 co-culture medium and comparable to that in the medium of the single culture of Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts (Figure 2i). As HA was not detectable in the culture medium of BMMCs, we concluded that HA in the medium of the co-culture was produced exclusively by fibroblasts.
Impaired Proliferation of CD44−/− BMMCs in the Co-Culture System
To determine the role of CD44 expressed in mast cells, we developed BMMCs from bone marrow cells of the CD44−/− mice and performed the co-culture experiments. There are no differences between CD44+/+ and CD44−/− BMMCs in size, histamine content, or metachromasy of the acidic Toluidine blue staining (Figure 3a and data not shown). Furthermore, no significant difference was observed between CD44+/+ and CD44−/− BMMCs in the surface expression of FcɛRI or c-kit, both of which are typical surface markers of mast cells (Figure 3b). The CD44 deficiency did not change the [3H]thymidine uptake and proliferation of BMMCs in response to IL-3 or SCF (Figure 3c and data not shown). These results indicate that commitment to mast cell lineage and cytokine-induced proliferative response are independent of CD44 in BMMCs, even although they express a low but detectable level of CD44.
In the co-culture system, the growth of CD44−/− mast cells was considerably impaired, in particular at the late phase (Figure 3d). In contrast to the continuous growth of control mast cells, the number of CD44−/− mast cells leveled off at day 8. In accord with this impaired growth, [3H]thymidine uptake during the co-culture period was also decreased in CD44−/− mast cells (Figure 3e). On the contrary, granule maturation (Figure 3a, lower panels), compound 48/80-induced degranulation, or chymotryptic activity of mast cells (Supplementary Figure 1) was not affected by the CD44 deficiency, although the histamine content, tryptic activity, and carboxypeptidase A activity had the tendency to be augmented in CD44−/− mast cells (Supplementary Figure 1). These results suggested that CD44 supports the continuous growth of co-cultured mast cells, but has no or little influence on the phenotypic changes during the maturation period.
Effects of an Anti-CD44 Antibody on the Cluster Size and the Proliferation of Cultured Mast Cells
A series of studies have been performed using specific antibodies to determine the role of CD44. We investigated the levels of maturation and proliferation of the cultured mast cells in the presence of an anti-CD44 antibody, KM81, which was reported to block HA binding to CD44.18 Proliferation of the co-cultured mast cells was significantly suppressed in the presence of KM81 (Figure 3f). On the other hand, KM81 did not affect the maturation indexes of mast cells, such as the Safranin-O staining, compound 48/80-induced degranulation, histamine content, or granule protease activities (Supplementary Figure 2). These results are consistent with the results obtained using CD44−/−-cultured mast cells.
Treatment with KM81 did not affect proliferation of CD44−/− mast cells (Figure 3g), which were found to form only small clusters, the size or number of which was not changed in the presence of KM81 (Figure 3h). By contrast, the cluster size of CD44+/+ cultured mast cells was reduced in the presence of KM81. Although co-cultured fibroblasts also express a low level of CD44, these results indicate that the primary target of KM81 is the CD44 expressed in mast cells.
Decrease in the Mast Cell Number in the CD44−/− Mice
We then compared the two different CTMC populations, peritoneal and cutaneous mast cells, in the CD44+/+ and CD44−/− mice. Flow cytometric analyses confirmed that the c-kit-positive cells in the peritoneal cavities and ear tissues of CD44+/+ mice expressed not only FcɛRI but also CD44 (Figure 4a), indicating that the mast cell population from these tissues express CD44. The expression levels of FcɛRI and c-kit were comparable between the CD44+/+ and CD44−/− mast cells (Figure 4a). The results of acidic toluidine blue staining indicated that the size and morphology of tissue mast cells were indistinguishable between CD44+/+ and CD44−/− mice (Figure 4b–e). In contrast, both the number and the histamine content of mast cells were significantly lower in the CD44−/− mice than those in the wild-type mice (Figure 4f–i). The decrease in the number of tissue mast cells in the CD44−/− mice is consistent with the impaired growth of CD44−/− mast cells co-cultured with fibroblasts.
Requirement of CD44 for In Vivo Proliferation of the Mast Cells Reconstituted into Cutaneous Tissues of the KitW/KitW-v Mice
As accumulating evidence has indicated that CD44 is involved in infiltration and chemotaxis of a variety of leukocytes, it remained ambiguous whether the decrease in the number of tissue mast cells in the CD44−/− mice resulted from the impaired cell growth or the defect in the migration of immature mast cells. We, therefore, investigated the proliferation of immature mast cells using an in vivo model system, in which BMMCs are reconstituted into the KitW/KitW-v mice. BMMCs derived from the CD44+/+ or CD44−/− littermates were injected into the peritoneal cavities or ear tissues of the KitW/KitW-v mice, and the number and morphology of the transplanted BMMCs were examined 5 or 10 weeks after the initial injection. The transplanted BMMCs derived from CD44+/+ and CD44−/− mice exhibited similar metachromasy in the peritoneal cavities and ear tissues (Figure 5a). In the peritoneal cavities, there was no difference in the number or histamine content of the transplanted mast cells derived from CD44+/+ and CD44−/− mice (Figure 5b and c). On the other hand, the number of metachromatic cells upon toluidine blue staining in the tissues transplanted with CD44+/+ BMMCs was significantly increased from 5 to 10 weeks after the initial injection, whereas that in the tissues transplanted with CD44−/− mast cells was unchanged (Figure 5d); the number of mast cells in the ear tissues transplanted with CD44+/+ BMMCs was approximately twice as large as that in the tissues transplanted with CD44−/− BMMCs at 10 weeks after the injection. The histamine content in ear tissues at 10 weeks after the initial injection reflected the difference in the mast cell numbers (Figure 5e). As the number of the transplanted mast cells in the spleen was found to be very small and similar between the mice injected with CD44+/+ BMMCs and those with CD44−/− BMMCs (data not shown), it is less likely that the absence of CD44 affect the process of mast cell evasion from the injection sites. These results suggest that CD44 is involved in the regulation of mast cell number in cutaneous tissues.
DISCUSSION
Regulation of Tissue Mast Cell Number by CD44 Expressed in the Mast Cells
Recent studies identified the candidates for the committed mast cell progenitor, although the nature of them remains controversial.19, 20 As the mast cell progenitor is a rare population as compared with a large number of tissue resident mast cells, proliferation after tissue infiltration of immature mast cells should be essential for maintenance of local mast cell number. Although proliferation of mast cells under emergency conditions, such as acute parasite infection, has been investigated in detail, it remains largely unknown how mast cell proliferation is regulated under steady-state conditions.21 Our results obtained in the culture system indicated that the upregulation of CD44 during mast cell maturation should promote the proliferation of mast cells. The positive role of CD44 in mast cell proliferation was also supported by two in vivo findings, decrease in the number of tissue mast cells in the CD44−/− mice and the unchanged number of metachromatic cells in cutaneous tissues reconstituted with the CD44−/− BMMCs. As these in vivo data were obtained by the end point measurement, we cannot exclude possibilities that CD44 is involved in the process of maturation and/or survival of cutaneous mast cells. However, involvement of CD44 in maturation and survival of mast cells was not supported by the results obtained in the culture system. Our results collectively suggest that CD44 plays a crucial role in the regulation of mast cell number in the cutaneous tissues.
As accumulating evidence has indicated that CTMCs are involved in a diverse array of immune responses, it is possible that inflammatory responses in cutaneous tissues are affected by the decrease in mast cell number in the CD44−/− mice. CD44 is a potential therapeutic target for prevention of mast cells hyperplasia, which is often observed in chronic inflammatory diseases, such as atopic dermatitis and rheumatoid arthritis (RA). However, we could not detect significant changes in IgE-mediated immediate allergic responses in the CD44−/− mice (data not shown), such as passive cutaneous anaphylaxis reaction, which is solely dependent on cutaneous mast cells, raising the possibility that the mast cell number in the CD44−/− mice is enough to evoke such responses. We have to focus on the roles of CD44 under chronic inflammatory conditions, although multiple roles of CD44, such as extravasation and adhesion of the other leukocytes, would make difficult to ascertain the impact of CD44 expressed in mast cells.
We noticed the inconsistency in the number of peritoneal CD44−/− mast cells; as compared with the CD44+/+ mice, the CD44−/− mice had a slightly but significantly fewer mast cells in the peritoneal cavity, whereas no significant differences were found between the number of transplanted CD44+/+ and CD44−/− mast cells. This inconsistency may arise from the moderate increase in the number of the transplanted BMMCs in the peritoneal cavity in comparison with that in the cutaneous tissues. It is also possible that the degree of contribution of CD44 is lower in the peritoneal cavity than in cutaneous tissues as the extracellular matrix containing HA is not so much developed in the peritoneal cavity as in cutaneous tissues.
Regulation of CD44 by Tissue Environmental Factors
Alteration and breakdown of the extracellular matrix is a general feature of chronic inflammatory diseases. Recent studies have indicated that CTMCs are involved in inflammatory arthritis; mast cell-deficient mouse strains were resistant to autoimmune inflammatory arthritis;22 and an increase in the local mast cell number is observed in RA and is closely correlated with the clinical progress of this disease.23 The increase of mast cells in RA is attributed to the altered connection between mast cells and the extracellular matrix, as the synovial matrix in RA was often disrupted through altered metabolism of HA.24 Human CD34+ cell-derived cultured mast cells were reported to bind to HA through CD44 and to shed CD44 molecules upon activation of FcɛRI, although it remained unknown what is the physiological roles of CD44 in human mast cells.25 Shedding of CD44 may affect the fate of tissue mast cells that are activated upon FcɛRI cross-linking. It is interesting to investigate the roles of CD44 in mast cells under chronic inflammatory conditions, where tissue mast cells are activated.
Mechanism Underlying CD44-Mediated Proliferation
Accumulating evidence has suggested that CD44 is involved in the proliferation of many cell types, although the underlying molecular mechanism remains largely unknown. Earlier studies indicated that CD44 can function as a co-receptor to activate the signaling pathway through interacting with several growth factor receptors.26, 27, 28 It is possible that CD44 functions as a co-receptor to potentiate the growth signaling in mast cells. As c-kit is the dominant receptor that regulates proliferation and differentiation of mast cells, c-kit is one of the possible partners of CD44 when it functions as a co-receptor. Although we could not detect any interaction between CD44 and c-kit by immunoprecipitation (data not shown), further analyses are required about potential cross-talk of the signaling pathway between CD44 and c-kit.
CD44 was reported to modulate cytokine synthesis by leukocytes, such as T cells and macrophages,7 raising a possibility that cytokine synthesis in mast cells are also modulated by CD44. An array of studies showed that mast cells are the sources of cytokines, which can affect their own growth in an autocrine manner.21 CD44 and the extracellular matrix containing HA can trap and concentrate the growth factors and enzymes involved in the cell growth.6 In-depth analyses of the matrix components may shed light on the roles of growth factors in mast cell proliferation in the clusters.
Tolg et al29 showed that the receptor for HA-mediated motility (RHAMM), which is known as another HA receptor, functions as an essential regulator of the CD44-ERK1/2 axis in motogenic signaling in fibroblasts. Furthermore, Nedvetzki et al30 showed that collagen-induced arthritis was exacerbated in the CD44−/− mice, and suggested that the signaling through RHAMM augmented by accumulated HA is responsible for the aggravation of joint inflammation. These findings indicate the co-operative and compensatory functions of RHAMM. However, our attempts to show a possible involvement of RHAMM in the regulation of mast cell proliferation have been currently unsuccessful; no significant changes of proliferation were found in the presence of an anti-RHAMM antibody, although the surface expression of RHAMM was detected by flow cytometry (data not shown).
In summary, our results suggest that the number of mature mast cells in cutaneous tissues is regulated at least, in part, by CD44 in mice; CD44 promotes proliferation during the terminal differentiation of tissue mast cells. CD44 might be one of the potential therapeutic targets for chronic cutaneous inflammatory diseases accompanied by mast cell hyperplasia.
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Acknowledgements
The authors are grateful to Professor M Miyasaka (Osaka University) for the generous gifts of the series of monoclonal antibody raised against CD44. H Takanao was supported by 21st Century COE Program ‘Knowledge Information Infrastructure for Genome Science.’ S Tanaka was supported in part by a grant from Uehara Memorial Foundation, Naito Foundation, Kao Foundation for Arts and Sciences, Sankyo Foundation of Life Science, and the Fugaku Trust for Medical Research. K Nakayama, Y Sugimoto, and S Tanaka were supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Science, Sports and Technology of Japan and from the Ministry of Health and Labor of Japan.
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Takano, H., Nakazawa, S., Shirata, N. et al. Involvement of CD44 in mast cell proliferation during terminal differentiation. Lab Invest 89, 446–455 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1038/labinvest.2008.159
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/labinvest.2008.159
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