Isolation and characterization of Hofbauer cells from human term placentas
Dancan M. Wakoli, Bartholomew N. Ondigo

TL;DR
This paper reviews Hofbauer cell isolation methods and their role in healthy and complicated pregnancies to promote standardized research.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive review of Hofbauer cell isolation techniques and their functional roles in pregnancy.
Findings
Hofbauer cells are the most abundant immune cells in placental villi.
No consensus exists on optimal isolation methods or timing for Hofbauer cell studies.
Standardized isolation techniques are needed for comparative research across labs.
Abstract
Hofbauer cells (HBCs) are macrophages of fetal origin present in the human placenta that play a key role in maintaining a healthy pregnancy. They are the most abundant immune cells (> 90%) in the placental villi. They have been implicated in various complications of pregnancy, though their role in these pathologies remains rudimentary. In addition, despite being discovered over a century ago, there is no consensus on the specific time window between delivery and placental sample processing for HBCs isolation, the site of biopsy sampling, and isolation protocol. In previous studies, mechanical disintegration, enzymatic digestions, density gradient separation, homogenization, adherence, rosetting, and immune selection techniques have been used to isolate HBCs for immunological studies. Here we review current knowledge on HBCs isolation methods, their role in healthy and pathologic…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsReproductive System and Pregnancy · Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies · Blood groups and transfusion
