Optimization of Tissue Digestion Methods for Characterization of Photoaged Skin by Single Cell RNA Sequencing Reveals Preferential Enrichment of T Cell Subsets

Cells. 2024 Jan 31;13(3):266. doi: 10.3390/cells13030266.

Abstract

Healthy human skin tissue is often used as a control for comparison to diseased skin in patients with skin pathologies, including skin cancers or other inflammatory conditions such as atopic dermatitis or psoriasis. Although non-affected skin from these patients is a more appropriate choice for comparison, there is a paucity of studies examining such tissue. This lack is exacerbated by the difficulty of processing skin tissue for experimental analysis. In addition, choosing a processing protocol for skin tissue which preserves cell viability and identity while sufficiently dissociating cells for single-cell analysis is not a trivial task. Here, we compare three digestion methods for human skin tissue, evaluating the cell yield and viability for each protocol. We find that the use of a sequential dissociation method with multiple enzymatic digestion steps produces the highest cell viability. Using single-cell sequencing, we show this method results in a relative increase in the proportion of non-antigen-presenting mast cells and CD8 T cells as well as a relative decrease in the proportion of antigen-presenting mast cells and KYNU+ CD4 T cells. Overall, our findings support the use of this sequential digestion method on freshly processed human skin samples for optimal cell yield and viability.

Keywords: T cells; immune cell composition; melanoma; scRNA-seq; skin cancer; tissue digestion.

MeSH terms

  • Dermatitis, Atopic* / pathology
  • Digestion
  • Humans
  • Sequence Analysis, RNA
  • Skin* / pathology
  • T-Lymphocyte Subsets / pathology

Grants and funding

The American Cancer Society, grants no. 129523-MRSG-16-029-01-DDC and TLC-21-003-01-TLC. The Department of Defense (DOD) grant numbers: W81XWH-17-1-0514 and W81XWH-17-1-0098. The Kuni Foundation, Discovery Grants for Cancer Research. The OHSU Physician-Scientist Program. OHSU Cancer Early Detection Advanced Research Center (CEDAR), and the ACED alliance award number 19P0023.