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1.
Summary NaIO4 treatment of mouse adherent peritoneal cells or lymphocyte-free cloned macrophages enhances their cytotoxic and tumoricidal activity. 5×10–3 M NaIO4 treatment of nontumoricidal BCG-activated macrophages renders them completely tumoricidal, whereas the same treatment of stimulated (peptone-normal) macrophages renders them weakly tumoricidal. Addition of LPS in nanogram quantities too low to enhance tumor cell killing by untreated peptone-normal macrophages causes NaIO4-treated peptone-normal macrophages to be maximally tumoricidal. The activating action of NaIO4, MAF, or LPS can be potently, but inconsistently, blocked or reversed by the reducing agent NaBH4 or the aldehyde-reacting agent dimedone. NaIO4 treatment of lymphocyte-free macrophage colonies does not make them cytotoxic, but NaIO4-treated colony macrophages are cytotoxic for tumor cells when cultured in 10 ng/ml LPS (an amount of LPS inadequate to render untreated colony macrophages cytotoxic). Supernatants of NaIO4-treated adherent peritoneal cells contain MAF activity. Thus, the NaIO4-induced enhancement of peritoneal cell tumoricidal activity may result from both direct NaIO4 activating effects on macrophages and indirect NaIO4 effects through NaIO4-induced MAF production.  相似文献   

2.
Addition of interferon (IF) inducers pyran copolymer, poly(I)-poly(C), an ether extract of Brucella abortus (Bru-Pel), or Salmonella typhimurium lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to cultures of peritoneal macrophages in vitro enhanced their cytotoxic activity for MBL-2 lymphoblastic leukemia cells. To evaluate the role of induced IF in the macrophage activation, highly specific rabbit anti-L-cell IF globulin was added to resting macrophage cultures at the same time as the macrophage-activating agents. Macrophage activation by these various biological and synthetic agents was totally neutralized by anti-IF globulin but not by normal rabbit globulin. Similarly, the anti-IF globulin inhibited the ability of chromatography-purified Newcastle disease virus-induced IF to render macrophages cytotoxic, and the degree of neutralization of IF titer corresponded with the inhibition of IF-induced macrophage-mediated cytotoxicity. In contrast, macrophage activation by concanavalin A-induced lymphokine, which contains an antigenically different IF, was not affected by high titers of the anti-L-cell IF antibodies. The results indicate that endogenously generated type I IF may play an important role in control of macrophage function.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Macrophages continuously exposed to lymphokines (LK) and target cells throughout a 48-hr cytotoxicity assay exhibit 3-fold more tumoricidal activity than do cells optimally treated with LK before addition of tumor cells. Increased cytotoxic activity induced by continuous LK treatment was not due to direct toxic effects of LK on tumor target cells or to alterations in target cell susceptibility to cytopathic effects of LK-activated macrophages. Moreover, sensitivities of responsive macrophages to LK activation signals and time courses for onset and loss of tumoricidal activity during continuous exposure or LK pulse were identical. Analysis of macrophage or LK dose responses and time courses for development of cytotoxicity each suggest that differences in tumoricidal activity between macrophages continuously exposed or pulsed with LK were quantitative: the number of cytotoxic events was increased 2.7 ± 0.2-fold (mean ± SEM for 11 experiments) during continuous LK treatment. Optimal levels of macrophage tumoricidal activity then occur only if effector cells, target cells and activation stimuli are simultaneously present for a defined time interval: tumor cells need not be present during the initial 2 to 3 hr of culture; LK can be removed after 8 hr with little or no loss of cytotoxic activity. However, removal of LK or target cells during the critical 4- to 8-hr interval decreased levels of cytotoxicity 3-fold. Thus, nonspecific effector function by LK-activated macrophages in controlled by both the physicochemical nature of the LK mediator and the time interval effector and target cells are exposed to LK.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The objective of the present investigation was to establish whether a known lymphoreticular-stimulating agent Corynebacterium parvum would augment the established antitumor activity of -difluoromethylornithine in vivo. Furthermore, since C. parvum is known to boost cell mediated cytotoxicity, the effect of DFMO (DL--difluoromethylornithine·HCl·H2O) treatment was evaluated on macrophage and natural killer (NK) cell tumoricidal activity. DFMO administered alone, 1% or 2% in drinking water, inhibited 49.4% or 88.0% of B16 melanoma growth in vivo, respectively. Administration of C. parvum alone, three doses of 300 g each, inhibited tumor growth 57.4%. When administered together, DFMO and C. parvum treatment resulted in 89.8% (1% DFMO) or 97.4% (2% DFMO) inhibition of melanoma growth depending upon the dose of DFMO. C. parvum-treated animals had increased levels of macrophage-mediated tumoricidal activity directed against B16 melanoma cells in vitro, however, NK cell activity was reduced. DFMO treatment alone had no effect on macrophage or NK cell tumoricidal activity. In animals receiving both C. parvum and DFMO treatments macrophage-mediated tumoricidal activity was augmented. These results demonstrate that C. parvum can augment the antitumor activity of DFMO in vivo, possibly through macrophage activation. Furthermore, in contrast to many other cancer chemotherapeutic drugs, DFMO is apparently not immunosuppressive regarding tumoricidal effector cells.  相似文献   

6.
Guinea pigs immunized with ABA-tyr in CFA respond well by skin test to ABA-tyr-pulsed macrophages but poorly to ABA-coupled macrophages and not at all to ABA-coupled red cells, thymocytes, or L2C cells. On the other hand, guinea pigs immunized with ABA-coupled macrophages do not respond to ABA-insulin or ABA-tyr-pulsed macrophages but do respond to ABA-coupled macrophages. Similarly guinea pigs immunized with Ars-NCS-coupled macrophages respond only to the homologous antigen. The specificity of these reactions is determined by how ABA is associated with the Ia-positive accessory cell. The presence of Ia molecule is not a sufficient condition since neither Ia-positive L2C cells nor spleen cells depleted of adherent macrophages are effective as immunogens or elicitors of response when coupled with ABA. These results suggest that the topography of the ABA and Ia complex formed on the accessory cell is the prime determinant of specificity for T-cells responses.  相似文献   

7.
The types of target structures recognized by cytotoxic macrophages have been described for various microorganisms, but have not been defined for tumor cells. Tumoricidal macrophages are selective in their destructive mechanisms, sparing normal cells while directing their lytic machinery toward neoplastic targets. The cytotoxic activity of macrophages from a primitive vertebrate, the nurse shark, closely resembles the activity of mammalian tumoricidal macrophages. Host defense mechanisms of these animals appear to rely on antigen nonspecific cellular effector systems, and it has been postulated that macrophage-mediated cytotoxicity plays a dominant role in protection during periods of decreased environmental temperatures when lymphocyte responses of poikilothermic vertebrates are compromised. Similar to mammalian tumoricidal macrophages shark macrophages display selective recognition of target cells. Previous studies showed that TNP modification of targets was protective, preventing recognition by the shark spontaneously cytotoxic macrophage. Additionally, it was shown that cytotoxic activity was inhibited in a dose dependent fashion by the addition of excess unlabeled targets. In the present study, similar inhibition experiments with hapten-modified targets have been used to determine the nature of the target structures recognized by the shark cytotoxic macrophage. Cold targets modified with haptens which react covalently with free amino groups on cell membranes, trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS) and flourescein isothiocyanate (FITC), are not recognized by the cytotoxic macrophage. The relative amount of membrane bound TNP was correlated with inhibition of cytotoxicity. Conversely, target cells modified with sulfhydryl reacting reagents, N-iodoacetyl-N'-(5-sulfonic-1-naphthyl) ethylene diamine and dithionicotinic acid, are recognized similarly to untreated targets. Moreover, TNP-containing lipids, permitted to diffuse into target membranes without covalent binding, do not alter target recognition, indicating that TNP itself has no effect on macrophage:target interaction. From these data, it is concluded that the shark cytotoxic macrophage interacts with membrane bound amino, but not sulfhydryl groups. The ability to distinguish between membrane structures may have appeared early in evolution as a means of preserving self cells while retaining protective nonspecific cytotoxic mechanisms.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Intracellular growth ofLegionella pneumophila, an opportunistic intracellular bacterium considered the cause of legionellosis, was assessed in peritoneal macrophages from normal and immunized guinea pigs. These bacteria grew exceedingly well in the normal guinea pig macrophages. Uptake of these bacteria was about the same by macrophages from either normal or immune guinea pigs, but their growth in immune macrophages was completely inhibited. Macrophages from normal guinea pigs stimulated with mezerin, a compound similar to diterpene ester, a known nonspecific stimulator of macrophages, or with specificLegionella vaccine released moderate or only small amounts of hydrogen peroxide, an indicator of macrophage activation to antimicrobicidal activity. In contrast, macrophages from immune guinea pigs produced much higher levels of hydrogen peroxide when stimulated with mezerein or theLegionella vaccine, and also showed a heightened response when cultured without a stimulator. These results indicate that macrophage activation related to the immune status of the host appears to have an important role in initial resistance toLegionella growth in susceptible individuals.  相似文献   

10.
Development of activated tumoricidal macrophages following Mycobacterium bovis, strain BCG infection in vivo or lymphokine treatment in vitro was examined with more than 20 mouse strains. Peritoneal macrophages from 8 of 22 strains failed to develop tumoricidal capacity by 7 days after intraperitoneal BCG infection. Macrophages from 6 of 6 in vivo nonresponder strains also failed to develop tumoricidal capacity after in vitro treatment with lymphokines. Identification of nonresponder mouse strains should provide a useful resource for analysis of intermediary reactions in macrophage activation.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Activated lymphocytes release numerous products which are either synthesized de novo or in increased amounts; some of these products play a role in the regulation of the immune response and are designated as mediators of cellular immune reactions or lymphokines. The first lymphokine described was the macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) which has been studied most extensively with regard to its chemical and biological properties. Using sensitive radiolabelling techniques and an antiserum against highly purified fractions of MIF we were able to identify several products of activated guinea pig lymphocytes with different molecular weights of 15.000, 30.000, 45.000, 60.000 which all had an isoelectric point of 5.2 and were all inhibitory to macrophage migration. It is suggested, that these molecules are oligomers of a common subunit of molecular weight 15.000. It was further shown, that molecules of the same physical-chemical and serological characteristics are produced by activated B-cells, L2C leukemia cells and growing fibroblasts, thus further substantiating earlier reports on the production of MIF by lymphoid and non-lymphoid cells. The described molecules were also shown not to contain determinants of the major histocompatibility complex and to be distinct from lymphotoxin, another lymphocyte activation product. It is concluded, that MIF is not sa single molecule but rather a system of structurally related molecules. Thier interaction with macrophages and possible relationship to macrophage activating factor is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Previous studies have shown that the activation of murine macrophages to a fully tumoricidal state requires that specific environmental signals be delivered to the macrophage in a step-wise manner: a "priming" signal first renders the macrophage stimulated, but not cytolytic. The addition of a second or "trigger" signal to the primed macrophage results in tumoricidal activity. One potent priming signal has been identified as IFN-gamma and one often used trigger signal for endotoxin-responsive (Lpsn) macrophages is LPS. In contrast to LPS-responsive macrophage, rIFN-gamma-primed C3H/HeJ (Lpsd) macrophages fail to become cytolytic in response to protein-free, phenol-water-extracted LPS preparations, but become tumoricidal when exposed in vitro to protein-rich butanol-extracted LPS or purified lipid A-associated proteins. Further characterization of the activation requirements of the C3H/HeJ macrophages revealed that for optimal elaboration of TNF in vitro, two signals were also required: rIFN-gamma and a second signal that contained LAP. C3H/HeJ macrophages macrophages primed with rIFN-gamma failed to produce TNF in response to any concentration of protein-free phenol-water extracted LPS, even when supernatants were concentrated before assaying for functional activity in a standard TNF L929 fibroblast assay. Although exposure of rIFN-gamma-primed C3H/HeJ macrophages to LAP resulted in a fully tumoricidal state equivalent to that exhibited by C3H/OuJ macrophages, the levels of TNF produced remained discrepant. Under identical conditions, C3H/OuJ macrophages produced approximately fivefold more TNF (11,776 U/ml) than C3H/HeJ macrophages (2,399 U/ml). This suggests that although C3H/HeJ macrophages can respond functionally in a "normal" manner given the correct signals, they remain quantitatively deficient in the production of certain proteins. In this system, the elaboration of TNF and macrophage-mediated tumor cell lysis were shown to be dissociable events. The tumor target used in these studies (P815) was shown to be resistant to as much as 40,000 U/ml of purified rTNF. In addition, C3H/OuJ macrophage cultures exposed to LPS only (which resulted in the production of high levels of TNF), failed to lyse these targets. Lastly, anti-mouse TNF antibody added to macrophage cultures had no effect on the induction of tumor cell lysis.  相似文献   

13.
Activated macrophages exhibit extrinsic antiviral activity (inhibition of virus replication in other cells) which may involve mechanisms similar to macrophage antitumor activity or macrophage-mediated immunosuppression. Peritoneal macrophages elicited in mice by Corynebacterium parvum vaccine suppressed the growth of herpes simplex virus (HSV) in infected cells by an interferon-independent mechanism. This was demonstrated by expression of activity against HSV-infected xenogeneic (Vero) cells. Culture supernatant fluids also did not mediate antiviral activity, and did not contain detectable levels of interferon (< 3 IU/ml). Moreover, antiviral activity was not affected by the presence of anti-mouse interferon IgG. Antiviral activity was expressed at 12–16 hr after infection, at the end of the first cycle of virus replication. Cell contact was required for optimal activity. No enhanced adsorption or phagocytosis of HSV by C. parvum macrophages could be detected nor was macrophage cytotoxicity responsible for the activity. Cytotoxicity (51Cr release) by macrophages for virus infected cells was low (< 6% specific cytotoxicity), and was not significantly higher with C. parvum macrophages than with resident macrophage controls. Although C. parvum macrophages were not cytotoxic at the macrophage-host cell ratio employed, they did significantly inhibit uptake of [3H]leucine by the host Vero cells. This suggests that inhibition of host cell metabolism by the macrophage, similar to macrophage immunosuppression, may be responsible for the antiviral activity in this system.  相似文献   

14.
Defective tumoricidal capacity of macrophages from C3H/HeJ mice   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
Peritoneal macrophages from C3H/HeN mice treated i.p. with T cell mitogens or viable BCG organisms were cytotoxic to syngeneic tumor cells in vitro. Macrophages from endotoxin-unresponsive C3H/HeJ mice treated with BCG or T cell mitogens, however, were not tumoricidal. Furthermore, unlike cells from C3H/HeN mice, macrophages from C3H/HeJ mice could not be activated for tumor cytotoxicity after in vitro treatment with bacterial endotoxins or with lymphokine-rich supernatants. The subnormal induction of cytotoxic macrophages after in vitro or in vivo treatments in C3H/HeJ mice appears to be a highly selective defect. Macrophage responses (yield, phagocytosis, or peroxidase staining) in inflammatory exudates induced by BCG, T cell mitogens, or heterologous serum in C3H/HeJ or C3H/HeN mice were identical. C3H/HeJ macrophages also responded normally in vitor to chemotactic lymphokines. Thus, C3H/HeJ macrophages possess a profound and selective defect in tumoricidal capacity. This defect was not dependent upon exogenous endotoxins. Defective macrophage cytotoxic responses may reflect non-LPS related functions regulated by the LPS gene.  相似文献   

15.
The expression of macrophage antitumor activity and the production of prostaglandins (PG) by operationally defined macrophage populations differed under varying culture conditions. Culture conditions that caused increased PGE2 production by activated macrophages resulted in an inhibition of their tumoricidal activity. In contrast, production of high levels of PGE2 by resident and elicited macrophages was associated with an increase in antitumor activity. The activation of resident or elicited cells by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) could be blocked by indomethacin. Treatment of these macrophages with PGE2 alone also resulted in their activation and subsequent tumor cell destruction. Activation of resident and elicited macrophages by LPS appears to be mediated by PGE2.  相似文献   

16.
Resident peritoneal macrophages from normal mice were activated for tumor cytotoxicity in vitro by co-cultivation with BCG1-immune spleen cells and PPD and by incubation with supernatants of PPD-stimulated BCG-immune spleen cell cultures (lymphokine supernatants). Lymphokine activation of macrophages occurred in unfractionated PC suspensions as well as in macrophage monolayers depleted of nonadherent PC. Tumor cytotoxicity by lymphokine-activated macrophages was evident by 3 to 4 hr of culture in active supernatants, reached maximal levels by 8 to 12 hr. and was absent by 20 hr. Continued incubation in lymphokines or even re-exposure after washing did not maintain macrophage cytotoxicity. The capacity of normal resident macrophages to be activated by lymphokines in vitro progressively decreased and was absent by 20 hr in culture. This decrease did not necessarily reflect cell death; macrophage viability as estimated by exclusion of trypan blue or by phagocytic responses did not change over the 20-hr culture period. The short lived nature of both macrophage tumoricidal capacity and capacity of precursor cells to be activated by lymphokines may function as negative feedback mechanisms in immune reactions.  相似文献   

17.
Monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1) is an important mediator of monocyte/macrophage recruitment and activation at the sites of chronic inflammation and neoplasia. In the current study, the role of nitrogen monoxide (NO) in the activation of murine peritoneal macrophages to the tumoricidal state in response to in vitro MCP-1 treatment and the regulatory mechanisms involved therein were investigated. Murine peritoneal macrophages upon activation with MCP-1 showed a dose- and time-dependent production of NO together with increased tumoricidal activity against P815 mastocytoma cells. N-monomethyl- -arginine (L-NMMA), a specific inhibitor of the -arginine pathway, inhibited the MCP-1-induced NO secretion and generation of macrophage-mediated tumoricidal activity against P815 (NO-sensitive, TNF-resistant) cells but not the L929 (TNF-sensitive, NO-resistant) cells. These results indicated -arginine-dependent production of NO to be one of the effector mechanisms contributing to the tumoricidal activity of MCP-1-treated macrophages. Supporting this fact, expression of iNOS mRNA was also detected in the murine peritoneal macrophages upon treatment with MCP-1. Investigating the signal transduction pathway responsible for the NO production by the MCP-1-activated murine peritoneal macrophages, it was observed that the pharmacological inhibitors wortmannin, H-7 (1-(5-isoquinoline sulfonyl)-2-methyl piperazine dihydrochloride), and PD98059 blocked the MCP-1-induced NO production, suggesting the probable involvement of phosphoinositol-3-kinase, protein kinase C, and p42/44 MAPkinases in the above process. Various modulators of calcium and calmodulin (CaM) such as EGTA, nifedipine, TMB-8 (3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoic acid-8-(diethylamino)octyl ester), A23187, and W-7 (N-(6-aminohexyl)-5-chloro-1-napthalenesulfonamide) were also found to modulate the in vitro macrophage NO release in response to MCP-1. This observation indicated the regulatory role of calcium/CaM in the process of MCP-1-induced macrophage NO production. Similarly, the role of serine/threonine and protein tyrosine phosphatases in the above pathway was suggested using the specific inhibitors of these phosphatases, okadaic acid and sodium orthovanadate.  相似文献   

18.
The regulatory mechanism of guinea pig lymphokines was investigated in regard to differentiation of myeloid cells to macrophages. The Ml-cell line, established from a myeloid leukemia of an SL-strain mouse, was induced to differentiate in vitro into mature macrophages possessing Fc receptors and the ability to phagocytize latex particles by treatment with crude lymphokines. Both concanavalin A- and antigen-induced lymphokines showed the differentiation-inducing factor (D factor) activity. However, macrophage migration inhibitory factor/ macrophage activation factor (MIF/MAF) purified by an immunoadsorbent column with anti-MIF antibody had no such an activity. The D-factor activity was detected in the lymphokine preparation that was not retained on the immunoadsorbent column. In contrast, colony-stimulating factor (CSF) was adsorbed to the immunoadsorbent column, and could be recovered in the purified MIF/MAF preparation. These findings suggest that the molecular entity of D factor is distinct from MIF/ MAF and CSF. A culture supernatant of guinea pig peritoneal macrophages activated with MIF/ MAF (CSF) exhibited strong D-factor activity. However, the supernatant possessed rather reduced CSF activity as compared to that of the original MIF/MAF (CSF) preparation. Thus, MIF/MAF may play an important role in macrophage differentiation by regulating the production of D factor or CSF from macrophages.  相似文献   

19.
We examined the effects of TGF-beta 1 on induction of several activated macrophage antimicrobial activities against the protozoan parasite Leishmania, and on induction of tumoricidal activity against the fibrosarcoma tumor target 1023. TGF-beta by itself did not affect the viability of either the intracellular or extracellular target in concentrations up to 200 ng/ml. As little as 1 ng/ml TGF-beta, however, suppressed more than 70% of the intracellular killing activity of macrophages treated with lymphokines. In contrast, more than 100 ng/ml TGF-beta was required to suppress intracellular killing by cells activated with an equivalent amount of recombinant IFN-gamma. Addition of TGF-beta for up to 30 min after exposure to activation factors significantly reduced macrophage killing of intracellular parasites. Pretreatment of macrophages with TGF-beta was even more effective: treatment of cells with TGF-beta for 4 h before addition of activation factors abolished all macrophage intracellular killing activity. Regardless of treatment sequence, however, TGF-beta had absolutely no effect, at any concentration tested, on activated macrophage resistance to infection induced by lymphokines or by the cooperative interaction of IFN-gamma and IL-4. Effects of TGF-beta on tumoricidal activity of activated macrophages was intermediate to that of its effects on intracellular killing or resistance to infection. Lymphokine-induced tumor cytotoxicity was marginally (25%) affected by TGF-beta; 200 ng/ml was able to suppress IFN-gamma-induced tumoricidal activity by 40%. Thus, TGF-beta dramatically suppressed certain activated macrophage cytotoxic effector reactions, but was only partially or not at all effective against others, even when the same activation agent (IFN-gamma) was used. The biochemical target for TGF-beta suppressive activity in these reactions may be the pathway for nitric oxide production from L-arginine, because TGF-beta also inhibited the generation of nitric oxide by cytokine-activated macrophages.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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