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1.
Macrophages are major viral reservoirs in the brain, lungs, and lymph nodes of HIV-infected patients. But not all HIV isolates infect macrophages. The molecular basis for this restrictive target cell tropism and the mechanisms by which HIV infects macrophages are not well understood: virus uptake by CD4-dependent and -independent pathways have both been proposed. Soluble rCD4 (sCD4) binds with high affinity to gp 120, the envelope glycoprotein of HIV, and at relatively low concentrations (less than 1 microgram/ml) completely inhibits infection of many HIV strains in T cells or T cell lines. HTLV-IIIB infection of the H9 T cell line was completely inhibited by prior treatment of virus with 10 micrograms/ml sCD4: no p24 Ag or HIV-induced T cell syncytia were detected in cultures of H9 cells exposed to 1 x 10(4) TCID50 HTLV-IIIB in the presence of sCD4. Under identical conditions and at a 100-fold lower viral inoculum, 10 micrograms/ml sCD4 had little or no effect on infection of monocytes by any of six different HIV isolates by three different criteria: p24 Ag release, virus-induced cytopathic effects, and the frequency of infected cells that express HIV-specific mRNA. At 10- to 100-fold higher concentrations of sCD4, however, infection was completely inhibited. Monoclonal anti-CD4 also prevented infection of these same viral isolates in monocytes. The relative inefficiency of sCD4 for inhibition of HIV infection in monocytes was a property of the virion, not the target cell: HIV isolates that infect both monocytes and T cells required similarly high levels of sCD4 (100 to 200 micrograms/ml) for inhibition of infection. These data suggest that the gp120 of progeny HIV derived from macrophages interacts with sCD4 differently than that of virions derived from T cells. For both variants of HIV, however, the predominant mechanism of virus entry for infection is CD4-dependent.  相似文献   

2.
Monocytes/macrophages (M/M) are the major host of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in solid tissues. However, blood monocytes are nonpermissive for HIV infection, indicating that M/M activation or differentiation is necessary for HIV replication. Since M/M are activated during immune responses, we investigated the effect of T-cell activation on HIV expression in M/M derived from peripheral blood of HIV-infected individuals. Previously, we reported that coculture of monocytes from HIV-infected donors with T cells and mitogens resulted in M/M differentiation and HIV expression. Production of HIV by M/M from infected donors required direct contact between monocytes and T cells (for the first 24 h), and the response to alloantigens, but not mitogens, was restricted to HLA-DR. In this study, we found that HIV was more readily recovered from M/M of asymptomatic HIV seropositive donors (69%) than from M/M of symptomatic donors (57%). Viral antigens (e.g., inactivated herpes simplex virus) could initiate the immune response and HIV expression. The ability of noninfected T cells to activate HIV expression in M/M and observations that treatments of M/M with antibodies to deplete T cells did not reduce HIV expression suggested that the monocytes were endogenously infected. To define the aspects of immune activation specifically involved in initiating HIV expression in M/M, interactions of M/M and T cells and participation of cytokines were investigated. The T cell which activated M/M was CD4+ CD8-. Fixed allogeneic cells are known to induce T-cell activation but were not able to serve as antigen for M/M differentiation, suggesting that M/M may need to function as antigen-presenting cells to receive the signal to differentiate and express HIV. Blocking of M/M-T-cell interaction with antibodies directed against LFA-1 or interleukin-1 prevented HIV expression. However, inhibition of later stages of T-cell activation, such as blocking of interleukin-2 receptors, did not diminish HIV expression in M/M. Consistent with the requirement for cell-cell contact between M/M and T cells, a variety of cytokines were unable to initiate HIV replication in M/M. The ability of T cells to induce cellular differentiation and HIV replication in M/M in vitro suggests that initiation of an immune response to an antigen, such as an opportunistic pathogen, could be a mechanism by which HIV disseminates to tissues in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
PBMC cocultured with HIV-infected monocytes for 12 to 48 h released high levels of IFN activity. IFN titers were directly dependent upon time after virus infection and level of HIV replication in infected cells. IFN induction in PBMC was evident with HIV-infected monocytes and PBMC and with myeloid and lymphoblastoid cell lines with at least three different HIV strains. In HIV-infected cell line pairs in which virus infection occurs in both productive and restricted forms, IFN induction in PBMC occurred only with productive infection. IFN activity was acid stable and completely neutralized by antibodies against IFN-alpha. Induction of IFN required cell-cell contact between HIV-infected cells and PBMC, but was independent of MHC compatibility. With PBMC co-cultured with autologous HIV-infected monocytes, IFN induction was highly selective: IL-1 beta, IL-6, or TNF-alpha activity and mRNA were not detected. Cell surface determinants on HIV-infected monocytes that induced IFN in PBMC remained active after fixation in 4% paraformaldehyde. Both adherent and nonadherent PBMC produced IFN after coculture with HIV-infected monocytes. Ability to produce IFN by PBMC was not affected by depletion of T cell, NK cell, B cell, or monocyte subpopulations. The IFN activity produced by PBMC cocultured with HIV-infected cells was about 20-fold less active than equal quantities of rIFN-alpha 2b for inhibition of HIV replication in monocytes and at low concentrations enhanced virus growth. Clinical studies with HIV-infected patients and parallel findings in animal lentivirus disease suggest an adverse role for IFN in disease progression. Conditions for induction of IFN in the culture system described in this report may mimic those in the HIV-infected patient. Defining the molecular basis for IFN induction, the cells that produce IFN, and the altered biologic activity of this important cytokine may provide insight into the pathogenesis of HIV disease.  相似文献   

4.
The lentiviruses of sheep, goats, and horses cause chronic multiorgan disease in which macrophages are highly permissive for viral replication. Monocytes, which mature into macrophages, are thought to be latently infected with lentivirus, but the extent to which other leukocytes are infected is unknown. Dendritic cells have not been studied separately from monocytes and T-cell subsets have not been examined in previous attempts to identify infected cells in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). We found no evidence of T-cell tropism using an animal-passaged, pathogenic ovine lentivirus. Phytohemagglutinin-stimulated infectious PBMC produced 20-fold less virus than differentiated macrophages, and cocultivation of infectious PBMC with fresh, uninfected phytohemagglutinin blasts did not facilitate virus replication. Furthermore, central lymph cells, the best in vivo source of purified lymphocytes, lacked virus and did not yield virus upon in vitro cultivation. In contrast, cultivated blood-derived macrophages were highly permissive for viral replication. To identify the latently infected PBMC, PBMC from infected sheep were selectively depleted of monocytes and B cells by passage over nylon wool and then of nonadherent cells bearing CD4, CD8, T19, gamma delta T-cell receptor, CD45RA, or major histocompatibility complex class II antigens by panning. Removal of adherent monocytes and B cells or of adherent cells and the three major T-cell subsets (CD4+, CD8+, T19+) did not decrease the infectivity of PBMC. The richest sources of infected cells in fresh PBMC were CD45RA+ and major histocompatibility complex class II+ nonadherent cells, which are three characteristics of dendritic cells. Thus, the dendritic cell, and not the monocyte or the CD4+ cell, is probably the predominant infected cell type in blood.  相似文献   

5.
A nonadherent population of human monocytes has been shown to express the collagen hydroxylating enzyme prolyl hydroxylase in vitro. Enzyme levels present in freshly isolated nonadherent cells were induced 300% during the first 72 hours of culturing, which could be suppressed by cycloheximide. Maximum induction required both a feeder layer of adherent leukocytes, and 10-15% autologous plasma. Biosynthesis of Clq, a protein which also is hydroxylated by prolyl hydroxylase, by the nonadherent cells was significantly less than the adherent monocytes. Therefore, this collagen biosynthetic marker enzyme was not associated with Clq synthesis, which suggests that the enzyme is present for collagen biosynthesis.  相似文献   

6.
Mycobacterium avium frequently causes disseminated disease in patients with advanced AIDS with low CD4 counts. The effects of T lymphocyte on intracellular M. avium replication were examined. Plastic adherent monocytes and nonadherent lymphocytes were separated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells. After infection with M. avium, monocytes were cultured with or without autologous lymphocytes (1-10 cells/monocyte) for up to 7 days. Addition of lymphocytes to M. avium-infected monocytes significantly decreased intracellular M. avium growth after 7 days culture (n = 11, P < 0.01, paired t test) and increased IFN-gamma production compared to monocytes alone. Neutralizing IFN-gamma partially abrogated lymphocyte activity. CD4 depletion diminished anti-mycobactericidal effects and CD8(+) lymphocytes increased intracellular M. avium growth (P < 0.05, n = 5, t test). These data suggest that interactions between monocytes and nonadherent cell fractions such as CD4(+) T cells and NK cells are important in intracellular M. avium growth modulation in monocytes from healthy humans.  相似文献   

7.
The capacity of human monocytoid cell lines and peripheral blood monocytes to modulate their expression of plasminogen receptors has been assessed. After PMA stimulation, THP-1 or U937 monocytoid cells were separated into adherent and nonadherent populations. Plasminogen bound to adherent cells with similar capacity and affinity as to nonstimulated cells. In contrast, the nonadherent cells bound plasminogen with 5-17-fold higher capacity (without a change in affinity). This increase was selective as urokinase bound with similar affinity and capacity to the adherent and nonadherent populations. Upregulation of plasminogen receptors on the nonadherent monocytoid cells was rapid, detectable within 30 min, and reversible, adhesion of the nonadherent cells resulted in a sixfold decrease in plasminogen binding within 90 min. The increase in plasminogen binding to the nonadherent cells was associated with a marked increase in their capacity to generate plasmin activity from cell-bound plasminogen. PMA stimulation of human peripheral blood monocytes increased their expression of plasminogen receptors by two- to fourfold. This increase was observed in both adherent and nonadherent monocytes. Freshly isolated monocytes maximally bound 5.0 x 10(5) plasminogen molecules per cell, whereas monocytes cultured for 18 h or more maximally bound 1.7 x 10(7) molecules per cell, a 30-fold difference in receptor number. These results indicate that both monocytes and monocytoid cell lines can rapidly and markedly regulate their expression of plasminogen binding sites. As enhanced plasminogen binding is correlated with an increased capacity to generate plasmin, an enzyme with broad substrate recognition, modulation of plasminogen receptors may have profound functional consequences.  相似文献   

8.
A Valentin  J Albert  E M Feny    B Asj 《Journal of virology》1994,68(10):6684-6689
We have investigated the ability of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and HIV-2 isolates to infect and replicate in primary human macrophages. Monocytes from blood donors were allowed to differentiate into macrophages by culture in the presence of autologous lymphocytes and human serum for 5 days before infection. A panel of 70 HIV-1 and 12 HIV-2 isolates were recovered from seropositive individuals with different severities of HIV infection. A majority of isolates (55 HIV-1 and all HIV-2) were obtained from peripheral blood mononuclear cells, but isolates from cerebrospinal fluid, monocytes, brain tissue, plasma, and purified CD4+ lymphocytes were also included. All isolates were able to infect monocyte-derived macrophages, even though the replicative capacity of the isolates varied. Interestingly, isolates with a rapid/high, syncytium-inducing phenotype did not differ from slow/low, non-syncytium-inducing isolates in their ability to replicate in monocyte-derived macrophages. Others have reported that rapid/high, syncytium-inducing isolates have a reduced ability to infect and replicate in monocytes. However, different methods to isolate and culture the monocytes/macrophages were used in these studies and our study. Thus, the ability of HIV isolates to replicate in monocytes/macrophages appears to be strongly influenced by the isolation and culture procedures. It remains to be determined which culture procedure is more relevant for the in vivo situation.  相似文献   

9.
Apoptosis has been proposed to mediate CD4+ T-cell depletion in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals. Interaction of Fas ligand (FasL) with Fas (CD95) results in lymphocyte apoptosis, and increased susceptibility to Fas-mediated apoptosis has been demonstrated in lymphocytes from HIV-infected individuals. Cells undergoing apoptosis in lymph nodes from HIV-infected individuals do not harbor virus, and therefore a bystander effect has been postulated to mediate apoptosis of uninfected cells. These data raise the possibility that antigen-presenting cells are a source of FasL and that HIV infection of cells such as macrophages may induce or increase FasL expression. In this report, we demonstrate that HIV infection of monocytic cells not only increases the surface expression of Fas but also results in the de novo expression of FasL. Interference with the FasL-Fas interaction by anti-Fas blocking antibodies abrogates HIV-induced apoptosis of monocytic cells. Human monocyte-derived macrophages from healthy donors contain detectable FasL mRNA, which is further upregulated following HIV infection with monocytotropic strains. HIV-infected human macrophages result in the apoptotic death of Jurkat T cells and peripheral blood T lymphocytes. Interruption of the FasL-Fas interaction abrogates the HIV-infected macrophage-dependent death of T lymphocytes. These results provide evidence that human macrophages can provide a source of FasL, especially following HIV infection, and can thus participate in lymphocyte depletion in HIV-infected individuals.  相似文献   

10.
Macrophages are accessory cells that are vulnerable to infection by HIV-1. HTLV-IIIB, a lymphotropic strain of HIV, infects macrophages poorly resulting in either no or low levels of virus expression compared to high levels of productive infection after exposure of macrophages to the monocytotropic HIV strain Ada-M. Whether this results in an impaired ability of HTLV-IIIB-exposed macrophages to initiate protective cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) immune responses against these strains is not well defined. We investigated the ability of monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) exposed to lymphotropic and monocytotropic HIV strains to initiate primary CTL responses in vitro. MDM exposed to HTLV-IIIB induced a specific primary CTL response that was comparable to MDM exposed to the monocytotropic strain Ada-M despite marked differences in productive HIV infection in MDM between the two strains. CTL generated in this model were MHC-restricted, strain-specific, and CD8+. These data demonstrate that high levels of productive HIV infection in accessory cells are not a prerequisite for the generation of a primary CTL response, suggesting a novel immunologic interaction between MDM and lymphotropic HIV strains.  相似文献   

11.
12.
13.
Dendritic cells (DCs) are among the first cells encountered by human and simian immunodeficiency virus (HIV and SIV) following mucosal infection. Because these cells efficiently capture and transmit virus to T cells, they may play a major role in mediating HIV and SIV infection. Recently, a C-type lectin protein present on DCs, DC-specific ICAM-3-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN), was shown to efficiently bind and present HIV and SIV to CD4(+), coreceptor-positive cells in trans. However, the significance of DC-SIGN for virus transmission and pathogenesis in vivo remains unclear. Because SIV infection of macaques may represent the best model to study the importance of DC-SIGN in HIV infection, we cloned and characterized pig-tailed macaque DC-SIGN and generated monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) against it. We demonstrate that, like human DC-SIGN, pig-tailed macaque DC-SIGN (ptDC-SIGN) is expressed on DCs and macrophages but not on monocytes, T cells, or B cells. Moderate levels of ptDC-SIGN expression were detected on the surface of DCs, and low-level expression was found on macrophages. Additionally, we show that ptDC-SIGN efficiently binds and transmits replication-competent SIVmne variants to CD4(+), coreceptor-positive cells. Moreover, transmission of virus between pig-tailed macaque DCs and CD4(+) T cells is largely ptDC-SIGN dependent. Interestingly, MAbs directed against ptDC-SIGN vary in the capacity to block transmission of different SIVmne variants. These data demonstrate that ptDC-SIGN plays a central role in transmitting virus from macaque DCs to T cells, and they suggest that SIVmne variants may differ in their interactions with ptDC-SIGN. Thus, SIVmne infection of pig-tailed macaques may provide an opportunity to investigate the significance of DC-SIGN in primate lentiviral infections.  相似文献   

14.
The chemokine receptor CCR5 and to a lesser extent CCR3 and CCR2b have been shown to serve as coreceptors for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) entry into blood- or tissue-derived macrophages. Therefore, we examined the expression of the chemokine receptors CCR1, CCR2b, CCR3, CCR5, and CXCR4 as RNAs or as membrane-expressed antigens in monocytes maturing into macrophages and correlated these results with the susceptibility of macrophages to HIV-1 infection, as measured by their concentrations of extracellular p24 antigen and levels of intracellular HIV DNA by quantitative PCR. There was little change in levels of CCR1, CCR2b, and CCR5 RNAs. CCR3 RNA and surface antigen were undetectable throughout maturation of adherent monocytes over 10 days. CXCR4 RNA and membrane antigen were strongly expressed in newly adherent monocytes, but their levels declined at day 7. The amounts of CCR5 RNA remained stable, but the amounts of CCR5 antigen increased from undetectable to peak levels at day 7 and then declined slightly at day 10. Levels of susceptibility to laboratory (HIV-1BaL) and clinical strains of HIV-1 showed parallel kinetics, peaking at day 7 and then decreasing at days 10 to 14. The concordance of levels of HIV DNA and p24 antigen suggested that the changes in susceptibility with monocyte maturation were at or immediately after entry and correlated well with CCR5 expression and inversely with CXCR4 expression.  相似文献   

15.
Glutamate metabolism in HIV-infected macrophages: implications for the CNS   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Central nervous system disorders are still a common complication of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and can lead to dementia and death. They are mostly the consequences of an inflammatory macrophagic activation and relate to glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity. However, recent studies also suggest neuroprotective aspects of macrophage activation through the expression of glutamate transporters and glutamine synthetase. We thus aimed to study whether HIV infection or activation of macrophages could modulate glutamate metabolism in these cells. We assessed the effect of HIV infection on glutamate transporter expression as well as on glutamate uptake by macrophages and showed that glutamate transport was partially decreased in the course of virus replication, whereas excitatory amino acid transporter-2 (EAAT-2) gene expression was dramatically increased. The consequences of HIV infection on glutamine synthetase were also measured and for the first time we show the functional expression of this key enzyme in macrophages. This expression was repressed during virus production. We then quantified EAAT-1 and EAAT-2 gene expression as well as glutamate uptake in differentially activated macrophages and show that the effects of HIV are not directly related to pro- or anti-inflammatory mediators. Finally, this study shows that glutamate transport by macrophages is less affected than what has been described in astrocytes. Macrophages may thus play a role in neuroprotection against glutamate in the infected brain, through their expression of both EAATs and glutamine synthetase. Because glutamate metabolism by activated macrophages is sensitive to both HIV infection and inflammation, it may thus be of potential interest as a therapeutic target in HIV encephalitis. excitatory amino acid transporter; cystine-glutamate antiporter; glutathione; inflammation; oxidative stress; glutamine synthetase  相似文献   

16.
Macrophages infected with HIV-1 produce high levels of M-CSF and macrophage-inflammatory protein-1alpha (MIP-1alpha). M-CSF facilitates the growth and differentiation of macrophages, while the chemotactic properties of MIP-1alpha attract both T lymphocytes and macrophages to the site of HIV infection. Studies described in this work indicate M-CSF may function in an autocrine/paracrine manner to sustain HIV replication, and data suggest possible therapeutic strategies for decreasing viral load following HIV infection. We show that macrophage infection with measles virus or respiratory syncytial virus, in contrast to HIV-1, results in production of MIP-1alpha, but not M-CSF. Thus, M-CSF appears to be specifically produced upon infection of macrophages with HIV-1. Furthermore, addition of M-CSF antagonists to HIV-1-infected macrophages, including anti-M-CSF monoclonal or polyclonal Abs or soluble M-CSF receptors, dramatically inhibited HIV-1 replication and reduced production of MIP-1alpha. Our results suggest that biologic antagonists for M-CSF may represent novel strategies for inhibiting the spread of HIV-1 by 1) blocking virus replication in macrophages, 2) reducing recruitment of HIV-susceptible T cells and macrophages by MIP-1alpha, and 3) preventing the establishment and maintenance of infected macrophages as a reservoir for HIV.  相似文献   

17.
Although the number of macrophages detected in cultures of mouse spleen cells at the start of the culture was very small, it markedly increased during further incubation. Macrophages were generated not only from the glass-adherent cell fraction of spleen cells, but also from the nonadherent cell fraction obtained after removal of adherent cells either by incubating in glass petri dishes or by passing through a glass bead column. The generation of macrophages from the nonadherent cell fraction occurred even when it was separated as late as 48 hr after the start of the culture. The phagocytic activity of macrophages newly generated from the nonadherent cell fraction was relatively weak, but it was activated during further incubation. Based on these results, the maturation process of macrophages can be divided into at least the following four stages; glass-nonadherent nonphagocytic precursor cells, glass-adherent nonphagocytic precursor cells, immature macrophages with low phagocytic activity, and mature macrophages with full phagocytic activity. The addition of the capsular polysaccharide of Klebsiella pneumoniae (CPS-K) to cultures of spleen cells markedly suppressed the generation of macrophages. The suppressive effect of CPS-K depended on its dosage, and the minimum concentration of CPS-K showing a definite effect was 0.05 μg/ml. CPS-K inhibited further generation of macrophages in either the nonadherent or adherent cell fraction at any time after the start of the culture. The suppressive effect of CPS-K on the generation of macrophages could not be reversed by simple washing of spleen cells which had been kept in contact with CPS-K for 3 hr. There was no evidence which showed that CPS-K exhibited direct cytotoxic effects on spleen cells in the culture.  相似文献   

18.
Cytotoxic effector cells like cytotoxic T cells, NK cells, monocytes/macrophages, and neutrophils can lyse directly HIV-infected or HIV-coated cells in the absence or presence of anti-HIV antibodies. Therefore, these cytotoxic mechanisms can be invoked either in the control of HIV infection at early stages of the disease or in the generalized immunosuppression observed at later stages of the disease. The relationship between anti-HIV effector mechanisms and disease, however, remains elusive. The present study investigates in HIV+ seropositive asymptomatic patients peripheral blood monocytes (PBM)-mediated antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) against HIV-coated target cells in the presence of heterologous or autologous anti-HIV serum. To test for specific ADCC against HIV Ag, a T4+ CEM.TR line resistant to TNF and macrophage-mediated cytotoxicity was selected in vitro. ADCC was performed in an 18-h 51Cr-release assay using CEM.TR cells coated with inactivated HIV. Unlike PBM from normal controls, significant ADCC was observed by PBM from HIV+ seropositive patients in the presence of pooled HIV+ antiserum. The ADCC activity was specific for HIV and was dependent on the E:T ratio and the antiserum dilution used. Upon activation of PBM with rIFN-gamma, both normal and HIV+ PBM-mediated ADCC against HIV-coated CEM.TR. Furthermore, ADCC activity by PBM from HIV+ seropositive patients in the presence of their autologous serum was examined. Significant ADCC activity was observed and was dependent on the E:T ratio and serum dilution used. The findings demonstrating anti-HIV ADCC activity by PBM from HIV+ seropositive individuals and their autologous sera support the notion that monocyte-mediated ADCC may be operative in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
Ebola virus infects a wide variety of adherent cell types, while nonadherent cells are found to be refractory. To explore this correlation, we compared the ability of pairs of related adherent and nonadherent cells to bind a recombinant Ebola virus receptor binding domain (EboV RBD) and to be infected with Ebola virus glycoprotein (GP)-pseudotyped particles. Both human 293F and THP-1 cells can be propagated as adherent or nonadherent cultures, and in both cases adherent cells were found to be significantly more susceptible to both EboV RBD binding and GP-pseudotyped virus infection than their nonadherent counterparts. Furthermore, with 293F cells the acquisition of EboV RBD binding paralleled cell spreading and did not require new mRNA or protein synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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