Abstract: | A three-day treatment with IFN-gamma enhanced up to 300% the capacity of human monocytes and macrophages to produce H2O2 during the respiratory burst. IFN-alpha or -beta (type I IFNs), which did not by themselves influence the burst, were found to antagonize the enhancing effect of IFN-gamma (type II IFN). The antagonism was concentration-dependent and required the presence of type I IFNs during the whole period of IFN-gamma pretreatment. These results suggest that the host defense function of mononuclear phagocytes may be controlled by the relative local concentrations of type I and type II IFNs. |