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1.
Macrophage CSF (M-CSF, CSF-1) and IL-4 are two cytokines known to have effects on mature monocytic phagocytes in vitro. In this report we show that M-CSF and IL-4 activate resident mouse peritoneal macrophages to ingest particles via their C3b and C3bi receptors, which are not capable of mediating ingestion in resting cells. IgG-mediated ingestion was also increased by IL-4 and M-CSF. IL-1, IL-2, TNF-alpha, and IFN-gamma were not able to stimulate C receptor-mediated ingestion. Stimulation by IL-4 and M-CSF is dependent upon high cell density and greater than 24-h exposure to the cytokine. Interestingly, antibody to IFN-alpha/beta and mAb to IFN-beta inhibited the enhanced ingestion caused by both M-CSF and IL-4. However, neither IFN-alpha nor IFN-beta alone stimulated C receptor-mediated ingestion. M-CSF did not affect the ligand-independent distribution of CR3 on the macrophage surface. We conclude that two apparently unrelated cytokines, M-CSF and IL-4, both enhance macrophage phagocytosis of C and IgG-coated targets via a common pathway in which autocrine stimulation with IFN-alpha/beta is necessary but not sufficient.  相似文献   

2.
Macrophages exposed to lymphokines (LK) before exposure to parasites develop the capacity to resist infection with amastigotes of Leishmania major. Activity of LK for induction of this activated macrophage effector function is abrogated by depleting the LK of IFN-gamma, yet IFN-gamma is incapable of inducing the activity by itself. To identify the factors in LK that serve as second signals for induction of resistance to infection, we exposed macrophages to the following cytokines available as recombinant or highly purified reagents: CSF-1, granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), IL-1, -2, -3, -4, and -5, and IFN-alpha/beta. None of these factors induced resistance to infection by themselves or in combination with each other; in the presence of 50 U/ml IFN-gamma, three cytokines were active: GM-CSF, IL-2, and IL-4. IFN-gamma was an essential component of the activation cascade but was insufficient by itself to induce the effector reaction. Cytokines that act as cofactors with IFN-gamma worked directly on macrophages and not through another cell in the peritoneal cell (PC) cultures. Activation of PC depleted of Thy-1.2+ cells (85 +/- 5% macrophages) and bone marrow-derived macrophages (100% macrophages) showed that 50% maximal doses of GM-CSF, IL-2, and IL-4 for these macrophage-enriched populations were not different than for untreated PC. Unlike other effector reactions of activated macrophages, bacterial LPS did not synergistically enhance the activity of any of the cytokines, alone or in combination with IFN-gamma. Antibody depletion of the active cytokines from LK, singly or in combination, failed to alter the dose response of the active factors in whole LK for induction of resistance to infection. Thus, multiple factors can provide the second signal for IFN-gamma in the induction of resistance to infection, namely, GM-CSF, IL-2, IL-4, and at least two additional undefined factors in whole LK. Resistance to infection may be the first example of an activated macrophage effector reaction that has an absolute requirement for more than one endogenous signal for its induction.  相似文献   

3.
The capacity of 12 cytokines to induce NO2- or H2O2 release from murine peritoneal macrophages was tested by using resident macrophages, or macrophages elicited with periodate, casein, or thioglycollate broth. Elevated H2O2 release in response to PMA was observed in resident macrophages after a 48-h incubation with IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, TNF-beta, or CSF-GM. Of these, only IFN-gamma induced substantial NO2- secretion during the culture period. The cytokines inactive in both assays under the conditions tested were IL-1 beta, IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IFN-alpha, IFN-beta, CSF-M, and transforming growth factor-beta 1. Incubation of macrophages with IFN-gamma for 48 h in the presence of LPS inhibited H2O2 production but augmented NO2- release, whereas incubation in the presence of the arginine analog NG-monomethylarginine inhibited NO2- release but not H2O2 production. Although neither TNF-alpha nor TNF-beta induced NO2- synthesis on its own, addition of either cytokine together with IFN-gamma increased macrophage NO2- production up to six-fold over that in macrophages treated with IFN-gamma alone. Moreover, IFN-alpha or IFN-beta in combination with LPS could also induce NO2- production in macrophages, as was previously reported for IFN-gamma plus LPS. These data suggest that: 1) tested as a sole agent, IFN-gamma was the only one of the 12 cytokines capable of inducing both NO2- and H2O2 release; 2) the pathways leading to secretion of H2O2 and NO2- are independent; 3) either IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha/beta or IFN-alpha/beta/gamma and LPS can interact synergistically to induce NO2- release.  相似文献   

4.
Since some cytokines effectively enhance the cytotoxicity of monoclonal antibodies, we investigated whether a combination of cytokines can augment the antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) of monoclonal antibodies 17-1A and BR55-2 against the colorectal carcinoma cell line HT29. Since monocytes/macrophages are important effector cells for ADCC, we used a new flow cytometric cytotoxicity assay, which allows the analysis of long-term-ADCC exerted by these cells. In our previous studies with peripheral blood mononuclear cells from normal donors, we found that IL-2, IL-12 and IFN-alpha increase ADCC. Therefore, we examined whether combination of these three cytokines with IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, IFN-alpha, IFN-gamma, GM-CSF, M-CSF and TNF-alpha may yield higher ADCC than obtained by the application of single cytokines. Indeed, we found that the combinations IL-2/IFN-alpha, IL-2/IL-12 and IL-12/IFN-alpha potentiated ADCC. Interestingly, the ineffective single cytokines TNF-alpha and GM-CSF in the combinations IL-2/TNF-alpha, IFN-alpha/TNF-alpha and IFN-alpha/GM-CSF also proved to enhance ADCC. In contrast, IL-4 significantly suppressed the IL-2, IL-12 and IFN-alpha-induced ADCC. In addition, the immunosuppressive cytokine IL-10 in higher concentrations significantly suppressed the IL-12-induced-ADCC. Our results may be useful to find combinations of cytokines and mAb for the treatment of cancer.  相似文献   

5.
The influence of macrophage (M)-CSF on the production of inflammatory mediators has been examined in murine peritoneal macrophages. Cultures of macrophages treated with up to 30,000 U/ml of human rM-CSF or with 10,000 U/ml of L929-derived M-CSF did not reveal either PGE2, IL-1, or IL-6 secretion. In contrast, LPS, which served as a positive control, stimulated production of significant levels of PGE2, IL-1, and IL-6. Furthermore, Northern blot analysis of macrophage RNA revealed a strong induction of IL-1 alpha and IL-6 mRNA by LPS but not by M-CSF. Conditioned medium from macrophage cultures treated with purified L929 or human rM-CSF in combination with LPS exhibited a significant reduction of IL-1 bioactivity as compared with an LPS challenge alone. To investigate the mechanism involved in this M-CSF-dependent reduction of IL-1 bioactivity, we measured IL-1 alpha gene expression. The addition of M-CSF to LPS-treated macrophages did not affect IL-1 alpha mRNA levels suggesting that M-CSF may regulate production of an IL-1 inhibitor. This hypothesis was shown to be valid because removal of IL-1 alpha from conditioned medium of LPS plus M-CSF-treated cells allowed the detection of a nondialyzable factor that blocked IL-1-dependent thymocyte proliferation. The inhibitor appeared to be specific because it did not inhibit IL-2 and TNF bioactivities. Furthermore, this IL-1 inhibitor, which binds to cells and not to IL-1, competed with the binding of radioactive IL-1 alpha or beta to EL-4.6.1 cells. The results demonstrate that M-CSF alone does not induce proinflammatory mediators and PGE2 as was previously published. The data also suggest that M-CSF may play a role in the down-regulation of inflammatory responses.  相似文献   

6.
The cell surface expression of I region-associated (Ia) antigens by murine and human macrophages has been shown by investigators from a number of laboratories to be induced in a dose-dependent fashion by IFN-gamma, which is free of other lymphokines. The experiments described in this report demonstrate that fibroblast-derived IFN-beta exerts an antagonistic effect on IFN-gamma induced Ia expression in murine macrophages. Simultaneous addition of IFN-beta and IFN-gamma to peritoneal exudate macrophages results in decreased Ia expression when compared with macrophages treated with IFN-gamma only. Different sources of highly purified IFN-beta, as well as a recombinant human IFN-alpha (A/D Bgl; shown previously to be as active as IFN-beta in several other murine systems) acted in a similar antagonistic fashion to IFN-gamma-induced Ia induction. The down-regulation of Ia expression by IFN-beta is dose-dependent over a concentration range up to 100 U/ml. Time-course experiments indicated that for IFN-beta to down-regulate IFN-gamma-induced Ia, it had to be present either before stimulation with IFN-gamma or during the first 24 hr of simultaneous stimulation. Further experiments in which a highly specific antibody against IFN-alpha/beta was added to the cultures confirmed the findings of the time-course experiments. Inhibitors of the arachidonic acid pathway failed to reverse the effect of IFN-beta to reduce Ia antigen expression, which suggests that this inhibition is not prostaglandin mediated. Thus, these findings support a role for type I IFN as naturally occurring substances that negatively regulate the expression of class II molecules.  相似文献   

7.
IFN-gamma primes murine macrophages to render them responsive for triggering by subactivating concentrations of bacterial LPS to mediate nonspecific tumor cytotoxicity. However, IFN-gamma also has direct anti-proliferative effects on transformed cells that serve as sensitive tumor targets for cytotoxic macrophages. We investigated the effects of preexposure of L1210 mouse leukemia and P815 mouse mastocytoma targets to rIFN-gamma on changes in their susceptibility to cytotoxicity by LPS-activated mouse peritoneal macrophages (PM). Co-incubation of inflammatory PM and either L1210 or P815 targets with IFN-gamma and LPS produced a classical synergistic cytotoxicity for both targets over that of IFN-gamma or LPS alone. Similar synergistic augmentation of cytotoxicity occurred when effector PM were preprimed for 24 h with IFN-gamma before testing for cytotoxicity of untreated targets. However, pretreatment of L1210 and P815 targets for 24 h with IFN-gamma (50 U) before assay produced divergent results in that L1210 was more susceptible, whereas P815 was less susceptible to cytotoxicity by LPS-activated macrophages. Similar results were obtained when both macrophages and targets were pretreated separately with IFN-gamma for 24 h before their combined assay for tumor cytotoxicity. Pretreatment of L1210 targets for 1, 4, or 24 h with IFN-gamma produced similar effects on their increased susceptibility to macrophage cytotoxicity. In contrast, P815 pretreated for 1 and 4 h with IFN-gamma showed an early increased susceptibility to macrophage cytotoxicity followed by a decrease after 24 h pretreatment. The pretreatment of L1210 or P815 targets with IFN-gamma before their exposure to LPS-activated macrophages had no effect on the production of TNF. However, there was a corresponding increase in nitric oxide generation by LPS-activated macrophages after their exposure to IFN-gamma pretreated L1210 targets and a decrease in the presence of IFN-gamma-pretreated P815 targets that correlated with their changes in susceptibility to macrophage killing. Nitric oxide generation by macrophages alone in response to LPS was found to be greater than when effector macrophages were exposed to the tumor targets and this was either increased by L1210 or decreased by P815 that had been pretreated with IFN-gamma. Our results indicate that IFN-gamma may act directly and differentially on tumor targets to alter their susceptibility for macrophage cytotoxicity, which was coupled to changes in the generation of cytotoxic nitric oxide, rather than TNF production by the macrophage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Macrophages in varying states of activation differ in their ability to perform antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) and antibody-independent macrophage-mediated tumor cytotoxicity (MTC). To define further the activation requirements for macrophages to perform various cytolytic functions, we stimulated peptone-elicited peritoneal macrophages, which are only poorly cytolytic, with one of a panel of cytokines and then quantified three distinct cytolytic capacities. The peptone-elicited macrophages, after stimulation with IFN-alpha/beta, IL-4, or TNF, had increased ability to perform both the rapid and slow variants of ADCC but not to perform MTC. Stimulation with high doses of IFN-gamma, however, increased the macrophages' ability to perform all three cytolytic functions. GM-CSF had no effects on any cytolytic capacity. The effects of IL-4, TNF, IFN-gamma, and IFN-alpha/beta on the macrophages' capacity for both forms of ADCC were dose-dependent. IFN-gamma and IFN-alpha/beta increased the macrophages' capacity for both variants of ADCC within 4 hr of treatment, whereas IL-4 and TNF did so only after prolonged treatment. These results suggest that three forms of macrophage cytolytic capacity can be enhanced by cytokine treatment but that the requirements for enhancing each of the three forms of macrophage cytolytic capacity differ.  相似文献   

9.
We have previously shown the ability of different cytokines to induce antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) in murine cells in vitro. In addition we found that the administration to mice of IL-2-induced cells which mediated ADCC and that these cells were phenotypically similar to the cells induced in vitro. In the present study we tested the ability of various cytokines, including IL-1, TNF, IFN-alpha, and IFN-gamma to induce ADCC in vivo. We found that both IFN-alpha and IFN-gamma induced ADCC in the livers and spleens of C3H/Hen-treated mice and that these cytokines together with TNF enhanced the IL-2-induced ADCC in vivo. In C57BL/6 mice which, as previously shown, exhibit relatively low ADCC activity, IFN-alpha and IFN-gamma increased the IL-2-induced ADCC only when 100,000 U of IL-2 were used for priming. The effect of IFN-alpha on ADCC was dose dependent and was optimal after the administration of 200,000 U of the cytokine given three times a day for 3 days. Similar to the cells induced in vivo by IL-2, the precursors of the cells mediating ADCC were asialo GM1+ whereas the effectors were mainly nonadherent, Thy-1+ cells. IFN-alpha-generated cells mediating ADCC in the liver and spleen and, when combined with IL-2, ADCC was induced in the thymus as well. This effect of IFN-alpha on the induction of ADCC was exploited in an immunotherapy model in which we found that IFN-alpha significantly enhanced the antibody-mediated antitumor effect on established B16 melanoma liver micrometastases. Furthermore, when IL-2 and IFN-alpha administration was combined with the administration of mAb, a significantly reduced number of established 6- to 8-day B16 melanoma liver macrometastases and prolonged survival of tumor-bearing mice were seen. These studies imply that the administration of appropriate cytokine combinations may be a useful adjunct to the administration of mAb for the treatment of cancer in humans.  相似文献   

10.
We have previously established that IFN-gamma plus IL-2 induces murine macrophage tumoricidal activity. The purpose of this study was to identify the effector molecules that account for the IFN-gamma plus IL-2-induced macrophage cytotoxicity against P815 mastocytoma cells. ANA-1 macrophages and normal thioglycollate-elicited mouse peritoneal macrophages produced little or no detectable nitrite (NO2-) after incubation with IFN-gamma alone or IL-2 alone; however, IL-2 synergized with IFN-gamma for the production of NO2-. IFN-gamma plus IL-2 did not induce NO2- production or tumoricidal activity in ANA-1 macrophages that were cultured in medium devoid of L-arginine or in ANA-1 macrophages that were incubated with NG-monomethyl-L-arginine. As observed previously with ANA-1 macrophage tumoricidal activity, IL-4 inhibited IFN-gamma plus IL-2-induced, but not IFN-gamma plus LPS-induced, NO2- production. IL-4 also selectively decreased the ability of IFN-gamma and/or IL-2 to augment TNF-alpha mRNA expression in ANA-1 macrophages. Lastly, incubation of ANA-1 macrophages with anti-TNF mAb selectively inhibited the ability of IFN-gamma plus IL-2 to induce NO2- production and tumoricidal activity. These results indicate that IFN-gamma plus IL-2-induced tumoricidal activity is dependent upon the metabolism of L-arginine to reactive nitrogen intermediates, and they establish a role for TNF-alpha as a required intermediate for IL-2-dependent NO2- production and tumoricidal activity.  相似文献   

11.
Macrophages are activated by lymphokines (LK) to kill tumor cell and microbial targets. Interferon-gamma (IFN) is the major LK activity in conventional, antigen or mitogen-stimulated spleen cell culture fluids for induction of these macrophage effector functions. In view of the recent demonstration that murine macrophage-like cell lines have receptors for B cell stimulatory factor-1/interleukin 4 (BSF-1), a possible role for BSF-1 in regulation of macrophage function was considered. In this communication, thioglycollate-elicited murine peritoneal macrophages were shown to express about 2300 high affinity (Ka approximately 2 X 10(10) M-1) BSF-1 receptors/cell. Peritoneal macrophages treated with purified, T cell-derived BSF-1 developed potent tumoricidal activity against fibrosarcoma target cells. The concentration of BSF-1 that induced 50% of maximal tumor cytotoxicity was 38 +/- 4 U/ml for seven experiments; similar dose-responses were observed with recombinant BSF-1. That BSF-1 dose-responses for induction of macrophage-mediated tumor cytotoxicity were not affected by 5 micrograms/ml polymyxin B suggested that contaminant endotoxins played little or no role in cytotoxic activity. BSF-1 alone (less than or equal to 500 U/ml) was not directly toxic to tumor cells or macrophages. Macrophage tumoricidal activity induced by BSF-1 but not by IFN was inhibited greater than or equal to 90% with monoclonal anti-BSF-1 antibody. BSF-1 induced Ia antigen expression on peritoneal macrophages and increased (twofold to threefold) FcR(II)-dependent binding of murine IgG immune complexes to bone marrow-derived macrophages (greater than 98% macrophages). Based on these findings, it was concluded that BSF-1 is a potent macrophage activation factor.  相似文献   

12.
Macrophages are pivotal cells in interactions of man and leishmania. Leishmanial disease results from intracellular infection of macrophages: parasitized cells are seen in smears or biopsy specimens of lesions; macrophages cultured in vitro support replication of parasites. Paradoxically, parasite destruction is also mediated by macrophages, which become highly cytotoxic after exposure to immune lymphocytes or their lymphokine (LK) products. The precise molecular mechanisms by which lymphocytes or LK induce macrophage activation for leishmanicidal activity, however, are not yet known. We analyzed interactions of leishmania amastigotes with human monocytes cultured in vitro as a nonadherent cell pellet. Leishmania donovani and L. major replicated in freshly isolated monocytes. Monocytes treated with greater than 200 IU/ml of the LK, human Interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), destroyed tumor cells and L. donovani, but not L. major. Phorbol myristate acetate, endotoxic bacterial lipopolysaccharide, and recombinant human IFN-alpha and IFN-beta did not induce cytotoxicity. The time course for induction of cytotoxicity contrasted sharply with that of previously described monocyte antileishmanial activity: IFN-gamma induced cytotoxicity even when added after infection with L. donovani; induction of cytotoxicity did not require that IFN-gamma be present throughout the period of culture after infection: a 30-min preinfection pulse of IFN-gamma was sufficient to induce 70% of maximal activity; and freshly isolated monocytes and cells cultured for up to 4 days in vitro prior to infection and IFN-gamma treatment were equally responsive to IFN-gamma. These studies provide convincing evidence for intracellular cytotoxicity for L. donovani by freshly isolated human monocytes. This system provides an important base for further analysis of induction and expression of cytotoxic mechanisms against leishmania and other intracellular organisms that cause human disease.  相似文献   

13.
We reported previously that IL-2 induces tumoricidal activity in IFN-gamma-treated murine macrophages. The present study was performed to investigate the regulation of IL-2-dependent tumoricidal activity in murine macrophage cell lines. The v-raf/v-myc-immortalized murine macrophage cell lines ANA-1, GG2EE, and HEN-CV did not express constitutive levels of cytotoxic activity against P815 mastocytoma cells. Moreover, these macrophage cell lines did not become tumoricidal after exposure to IL-4, IFN-gamma, IL-2 or LPS. However, these macrophages developed cytotoxic capabilities after incubation with either IFN-gamma plus IL-2 or IFN-gamma plus LPS. IL-4 inhibited IFN-gamma plus IL-2- but not IFN-gamma plus LPS-induced tumoricidal activity. This effect of IL-4 was not restricted to v-raf/v-myc-immortalized macrophage cell lines because similar results were obtained by using a macrophage cell line that was established from a spontaneous histiocytic sarcoma. The suppressive activity of IL-4 on the ANA-1 macrophage cell line was dose-dependent (approximately 12-200 U/ml) and was neutralized by the addition of anti-IL-4 mAb. IL-4 decreased the IFN-gamma-induced expression of mRNA for the p55 (alpha) subunit of the IL-2R in ANA-1 macrophages. Therefore, at least one mechanism by which IL-4 may have inhibited IFN-gamma plus IL-2-induced tumoricidal activity was by reducing macrophage IL-2R alpha mRNA expression. We have previously reported that picolinic acid, a tryptophan metabolite, is a costimulator of macrophage tumoricidal activity. We now report that IL-4 also inhibited IFN-gamma plus picolinic acid-induced cytotoxicity in ANA-1 macrophages. We propose that IL-2 and picolinic acid may have a common mechanism of action that is susceptible to IL-4 suppression.  相似文献   

14.
Ia expression is an important marker of macrophage functional capacity. IFN-gamma induces Ia expression on perhaps all murine macrophages, whereas IL-4, granulocyte-macrophage CSF, and CSF-1 induce Ia on restricted sets of macrophages. Inhibitors of expression include PGE2, glucocorticoids, and IFN-beta. TNF has been found to augment Ia expression on several macrophage lineage cell lines but to inhibit expression on murine peritoneal macrophages. Our study shows that TNF can have opposite effects on Ia expression (induced by IFN-gamma) on thioglycollate-elicited peritoneal macrophages, depending on the length of time cells are treated and on the presence of other modulators. In particular, TNF augmented early expression induced by IFN-gamma but inhibited later expression. And although TNF synergized with PGE2 to markedly inhibit Ia induction on these cells, it partially antagonized the inhibition by corticosterone and IFN-beta. TNF and PGE2 also synergized to inhibit Ia expression induced on bone marrow-derived and splenic macrophages by either IFN-gamma or IL-4. In contrast to their effect on Ia expression, TNF and PGE2 had opposite effects on expression of gamma 2a FcR in macrophages. TNF blocked the increase in FcR expression due to any combination of PGE2, IFN-gamma, and IFN-beta. However, TNF and PGE2 both increased expression of gamma 2a FcR on WEHI-3 cells. If the different effects of TNF reflect the differentiation states of macrophages, its effects on Ia and FcR expression may vary with the progression of an immune response.  相似文献   

15.
IFN-alphabeta is a potent immunoregulatory cytokine involved in the defense against viral and bacterial infections. In this study, we describe an as yet undefined IFN-alphabeta-dependent pathway of IFN-gamma induction in mice. This pathway is based on a synergism of IFN-alphabeta and IL-18, and is independent of IL-12 signaling yet dependent on STAT4. In contradiction to current dogma, we show further that IFN-alphabeta alone induces tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT4 in murine splenocytes of different mouse strains. This pathway participates in the induction of IFN-gamma by Gram-negative bacteria and is therefore expected to play a role whenever IFN-alpha or IFN-beta and IL-18 are produced concomitantly during bacterial, viral, or other infections.  相似文献   

16.
In vitro culture of either human peripheral blood monocytes or murine peritoneal macrophages for 72 hr in the presence of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) dramatically increased their subsequent ability to mediate antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC). The M-CSF-treated cells were more effective in ADCC at lower effector to target cell ratios and in the presence of lower concentrations of tumor-specific monoclonal antibody than the untreated control cells. Two other hematopoietic cytokines, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and interleukin-3, reported to enhance other macrophage effector functions were ineffective in promoting the development of ADCC by cultured human monocytes. All three hematopoietic growth factors were capable of enhancing the ability of the cultured monocytes to secrete TNF alpha; however, TNF alpha is unlikely to be an important cytotoxic factor in ADCC because neutralizing antibodies against TNF alpha had no affect on ADCC in vitro. Further, much higher concentrations of M-CSF were required to augment monocyte TNF alpha release (20-100 ng/ml) than ADCC capacity (1-10 ng/ml). These results suggest that M-CSF administration might prove effective in increasing the tumoricidal activities of tumor-specific monoclonal antibodies by enhancing the capacity of monocytes and macrophages to mediate ADCC.  相似文献   

17.
This study was designed to examine the expression and function of IL-2R on murine macrophages. We used a model system of murine macrophage cell lines (ANA-1 and GG2EE) that was established by infecting normal murine bone marrow-derived cells with the J2 (v-raf/v-myc) recombinant murine retrovirus. ANA-1 macrophages did not constitutively express detectable levels of mRNA for the p55, IL-2R alpha. However, a brief exposure to IFN-gamma was sufficient to induce IL-2R alpha mRNA in ANA-1 macrophages. Flow cytometric analysis indicated that ANA-1 macrophages expressed low constitutive levels of IL-2R alpha on their cell surface that were augmented after treatment of the cells with IFN-gamma. Affinity binding and cross-linking of [125I]IL-2 to ANA-1 macrophages demonstrated that IL-2R alpha and the p70-75, IL-2R beta were both present on ANA-1 macrophages constitutively. IFN-gamma increased the expression of IL-2R alpha on ANA-1 macrophages but did not increase the expression of IL-2R beta on these macrophages. Although IL-2 alone did not induce the tumoricidal activity of ANA-1 macrophages, IL-2 acted synergistically with IFN-gamma to induce macrophage tumoricidal activity. These data demonstrate the expression of IL-2R on murine macrophage cell lines and establish the role of IL-2 as a costimulator of macrophage-mediated tumoricidal activity.  相似文献   

18.
Macrophage synthesis of nitrite and nitrate after activation by BCG infection or by treatment in vitro with both T cell-derived (lymphokines (LK) or recombinant murine interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma] and bacterial (lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and heat-killed bacillus Calmette-Guerin (hk BCG] agents was studied by using macrophages from C3H/He and C3H/HeJ mice. Spleen and peritoneal macrophages isolated from BCG-infected donors that were producing nitrate continued to synthesize nitrite and nitrate in culture. LPS treatment in vitro (25 or 50 micrograms/ml) additionally increased this nitrite/nitrate synthesis. Thioglycolate-elicited macrophages from non-infected C3H/HeJ mice treated with LK also produced nitrite/nitrate, and concurrent LPS (0.1 to 50 micrograms/ml) treatment resulted in enhanced synthesis. Recombinant IFN-gamma also stimulated nitrite/nitrate synthesis by C3H/He and CeH/HeJ macrophages as did LPS (C3H/He only) and hk BCG. When given concurrently with either LPS or hk BCG, IFN-gamma enhanced C3H/He and C3H/HeJ macrophage nitrite/nitrate synthesis over that produced by macrophages treated with either LPS or hk BCG alone. Macrophages activated in vitro exhibited a 4 to 12 hr lag time before engaging in nitrite/nitrate synthesis, which then proceeded for 36 to 42 hr at linear rates. Daily medium renewal did not alter the synthesis kinetics but increased the total amount of nitrite/nitrate produced. Nitrate and nitrite were stable under the conditions of culture and when added did not influence additional macrophage synthesis. Taken together, these results indicate that T cell lymphokines and IFN-gamma are powerful modulators of macrophage nitrite/nitrate synthesis during BCG infection and in vitro, and nitrite/nitrate synthesis appears to be common property of both primed and fully activated macrophage populations.  相似文献   

19.
To determine the role of IFN-gamma in the activation of resident mouse peritoneal macrophages, crude macrophage-activating lymphokines were incubated with a monoclonal anti-murine IFN-gamma antibody. This treatment abolished the capacity of mitogen-induced lymphokines to enhance either H2O2 release or activity against the intracellular protozoa Toxoplasma gondii and Leishmania donovani. All macrophage-activating factor detected by these assays was also removed by passing the lymphokines over a Sepharose column to which the monoclonal anti-IFN-gamma antibody had been coupled. Therefore, pure murine rIFN-gamma was tested both in vitro and in vivo as a single activating agent. After 48 hr of pretreatment in vitro with 0.01 to 1 antiviral U/ml, macrophage H2O2-releasing capacity was enhanced an average of 6.4-fold; half-maximal stimulation was induced by 0.03 U/ml. Resident macrophages infected with T. gondii half-maximally inhibited parasite replication after 24 hr of preincubation with 0.14 U/ml of rIFN-gamma, and near complete inhibition was achieved by pretreatment with 100 U/ml. Half-maximal leishmanicidal activity was induced by 0.08 U/ml of rIFN-gamma, and 67 to 75% of intracellular L. donovani amastigotes were killed after macrophages were preincubated with 10 to 100 U/ml. Eighteen hours after parenteral injection of rIFN-gamma, peritoneal macrophages displayed a dose-dependent enhancement of H2O2-releasing capacity and antiprotozoal activity. Half-maximal enhancement required 85 to 250 U or rIFN-gamma given i.p. Peritoneal macrophages were also activated by rIFN-gamma injected i.v. and intramuscularly. These results suggest that, in the mouse model, IFN-gamma is likely to be a primary factor within mitogen-induced lymphokines responsible for activating macrophage oxidative metabolism and antiprotozoal activity, and indicate that rIFN-gamma is a potent activator of these effector functions both in vitro and in vivo. These findings provide a rationale for evaluating rIFN-gamma in the treatment of systemic intracellular infections, and indicate that murine models are appropriate for such studies.  相似文献   

20.
Legionella pneumophila is an intracellular pathogen whose replication in macrophages is mainly controlled by IFN-gamma. Freshly isolated peritoneal macrophages elicited in vivo with thioglycolate (TG) from A/J mice are highly permissive to L. pneumophila growth in vitro, while TG-elicited macrophages from CD1 mice are resistant. In this study, we show that when CD1 TG-macrophages are cultured for 7 days, they become permissive to Legionella infection. We demonstrate that treatment with type I IFN (IFN-alphabeta) totally inhibits the growth of L. pneumophila in both freshly isolated A/J and in vitro-aged CD1 TG-macrophages. IFN-alphabeta protective effect on permissive macrophages was comparable to that induced by IFN-gamma. Even low doses of either IFN-alpha or IFN-beta alone were effective in inhibiting L. pneumophila multiplication in macrophage cultures. Notably, treatment of resistant, freshly isolated CD1 TG-macrophages with Ab to mouse IFN-alphabeta significantly enhanced their susceptibility to Legionella infection in vitro, thus implying a role of endogenous IFN-alphabeta in mediating the natural resistance of macrophages to L. pneumophila infection. Finally, addition of anti-IFN-gamma-neutralizing Ab did not restore Legionella growth in IFN-alpha- or IFN-beta-treated A/J or CD1 permissive macrophages, indicating that IFN-alphabeta effect was not mediated by IFN-gamma. This observation was further confirmed by the finding that IFN-alphabeta was effective in inhibiting L. pneumophila replication in macrophages from IFN-gamma receptor-deficient mice. Taken together, our results provide the first evidence for a role of IFN-alphabeta in the control of L. pneumophila infection in mouse models of susceptible macrophages and suggest the existence of different pathways for the control of intracellular bacteria in macrophages.  相似文献   

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