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1.
RANTES (regulated on activation, normal T expressed and secreted) is a member of the chemotactic cytokine (chemokine) beta subfamily. High affinity receptors for RANTES have been identified on a human monocytic leukemia cell line THP-1, which responded to RANTES in chemotaxis and calcium mobilization assays. Steady-state binding data analyses revealed approximately 700 binding sites/cell on THP-1 cells with a Kd value of 400 pM, comparable to that expressed on human peripheral blood monocytes. The RANTES binding to monocytic cells was competed for by monocyte chemotactic and activating factor (MCAF) and macrophage inflammatory protein 1 (MIP-1) alpha, two other chemokine beta cytokines. Although MCAF and MIP-1 alpha competed for RANTES binding to monocytes with apparent lower affinity (with estimated Kd of 6 and 1.6, nM respectively) both of these cytokines effectively desensitized the calcium mobilization induced by RANTES. The chemotactic response of THP-1 cells to RANTES was also markedly inhibited by preincubation with MCAF or MIP-1 alpha. In contrast, RANTES did not desensitize the THP-1 calcium mobilization and chemotaxis in response to MCAF or MIP-1 alpha. These results, together with our previous observations that RANTES did not compete for MCAF or MIP-1 alpha binding on monocytic cells, indicate the expression of promiscuous receptors on monocytes that recognize one or more cytokines within the chemokine beta family.  相似文献   

2.
We have identified and characterized a human beta (CC) chemokine, designated HCC-4, that is most closely related to HCC-1 and which demonstrates chemotactic activity for monocytes. Northern analysis of multiple tissue blots and of activated monocytes mRNA shows expression of a 500-bp mRNA. A 1,500-bp mRNA was highly expressed in monocytes activated 12 hours in the presence of interleukin-10 (IL-10) but was absent in monocytes activated for only 1 hour regardless of the presence or absence of IL-10. The upregulation of expression in the presence of IL-10 is in contrast to the downregulatory effects of IL-10 on expression of most other chemokines. Recombinant HCC-4 demonstrated chemotactic activity for human monocytes and THP-1 monocyte cells but not for resting lymphocytes or neutrophils. HCC-4 also induced a Ca2+ flux in THP-1 cells that was desensitized by prior exposure to RANTES. Taken together, these data indicate that HCC-4 is a novel chemokine whose expression is uniquely upregulated by IL-10.  相似文献   

3.
Staphylococcal superantigens (SAgs) are very potent T cell mitogens, but they can also activate monocytes by binding directly to MHC class II molecules in a manner independent of TCR coengagement. Induction of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokine expression in monocytes by superantigens has recently been reported. Here we report that superantigen stimulation of human peripheral blood monocytes results in a rapid, dose-dependent, and specific down-regulation of chemokine (macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha (MIP-1alpha), monocyte chemotactic protein-1 and MIP-1beta) binding sites (e.g., CCR1, CCR2, and CCR5), which correlates with a concomitant hyporesponsiveness of human monocytes to these CC chemokine ligands. This down-regulation occurs 15-30 min following superantigen stimulation and is specific to chemokine receptors, in that binding and responsiveness of monocytes to the chemoattractant formyl-tripeptide FMLP are not affected. We further demonstrate that SAg-induced down-modulation of chemokine binding and monocyte hyporesponsiveness to the chemokines MIP-1alpha, monocyte chemotactic protein-1, and MIP-1beta is mediated through cellular protein tyrosine kinases, and the down-modulation can be mimicked by an MHC class II-specific mAb. Additionally, our observations indicate that SAg-induced loss of chemokine binding and monocyte responsiveness is probably mediated by secreted serine proteinases. Bacterial SAg-induced down-modulation of chemokine responsiveness represents a previously unrecognized strategy by some bacteria to subvert immune responses by affecting the intricate balance between chemokine and chemokine receptor expression and function.  相似文献   

4.
The capacity of dendritic cells (DC) to initiate immune responses is dependent on their specialized migratory and tissue homing properties. Chemotaxis and transendothelial migration (TEM) of DC were studied in vitro. Immature DC were generated by culture of human monocytes in granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and IL-4. These cells exhibited potent chemotaxis and TEM responses to the CC chemokines macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1alpha, MIP-1beta, RANTES, and monocyte chemotactic protein-3, and weak responses to the CC chemokine MIP-3beta and the CXC chemokine stromal cell-derived factor (SDF)-1alpha. Maturation of DC induced by culture in lipopolysaccharide, TNF-alpha or IL-1beta reduced or abolished responses to the former CC chemokines but markedly enhanced responses to MIP-3beta and SDF-1alpha. This correlated with changes in chemokine receptor expression: CCR5 expression was reduced while CXCR4 expression was enhanced. These findings suggest two stages for regulation of DC migration in which one set of chemokines may regulate recruitment into or within tissues, and another egress from the tissues.  相似文献   

5.
Human neutrophils (polymorphonuclear leukocytes; PMN) respond to some CXC chemokines but do not migrate to CC chemokines. Recent work has shown that chemokine receptors can be modulated by inflammatory cytokines. In this study, the effect of IFN-gamma, a prototypic Th1 cytokine, on chemokine receptor expression in PMN was investigated. IFN-gamma caused a rapid (approximately 1 h) and concentration-dependent increase of CCR1 and CCR3 mRNA. The expression of CCR2, CCR5, and CXCR1-4 was not augmented. IFN-gamma-treated PMN, but not control cells, expressed specific binding sites for labeled monocyte-chemotactic protein (MCP)-3 and migrated to macrophage-inflammatory protein (MIP)-1alpha, RANTES, MCP-3, MIP-5/HCC2, and eotaxin. 7B11, a mAb for CCR3, inhibited the chemotactic response of IFN-gamma-treated PMN to eotaxin, and aminoxypentane-RANTES blocked PMN migration to RANTES. These results suggest that the selectivity of certain chemokines for their target cells may be altered by cytokines produced within an inflammatory context. Since PMN may play a role in orienting immunity toward Th1 responses, it is possible to speculate that IFN-gamma not only promotes Th1 differentiation directly, but also reorients the functional significance of Th2 effector cytokines by broadening the spectrum of their action to include PMN.  相似文献   

6.
Basophils and eosinophils can be activated in vitro by several chemokines such as RANTES, monocyte chemotactic and activating factor (MCAF/MCP-1), macrophage inflammatory peptide-1 alpha (MIP-1 alpha), and interleukin-8 (IL-8). To explore the clinical relevance of the in vitro observations, we measured here the concentrations of these chemokines in sputa from asthmatic patients during acute attacks. Before the onset of a late-phase exacerbation, sputum MCAF/MCP-1, MIP-1 alpha, and IL-8 levels transiently but markedly increased from the basal levels in all of the patients with exacerbation, whereas the sputum levels of these chemokines remained unchanged during the course in the patients without a late-phase exacerbation. These results suggest the involvement of these chemokines in the late-phase exacerbation of asthma.  相似文献   

7.
The ability of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) to modulate endothelial cell (EC) activation was investigated. Adding PMNs to cultured HUVECs resulted in a release of IL-6 (888 +/- 71 pg/ml, a 35-fold increase over release by the two cell types alone) and IL-8 (45.2 +/- 14.5 ng/ml, a 6.4-fold over PMN release alone and a 173-fold increase over EC release alone). In contrast, the release of TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, and platelet-derived growth factor was not affected by the EC-PMN coculture. Neutralizing mAbs to ICAM-1 or beta2 integrins or a physical segregation of PMNs and ECs did not reduce EC stimulation. In contrast, cell-free supernatants of PMNs recapitulated EC activation with an 18-fold up-regulation of EC IL-6 mRNA. The filtration of PMN supernatant or PMN pretreatment with metabolic antagonists or membrane cross-linking agents all suppressed EC activation. By flow cytometry, PMNs released in the supernatant, heterogeneous membrane-derived microparticles containing discrete proteins of 28 to 250 kDa as resolved by SDS-PAGE. PMN microparticle formation was enhanced by inflammatory stimuli, including formyl peptide and phorbol ester, and was time-dependent, reaching a plateau after a 1-h incubation from stimulation. Purified PMN microparticles induced EC IL-6 release in a reaction that was quantitatively indistinguishable from that observed with unfractionated PMN supernatant and unaffected by a neutralizing Ab to soluble IL-6R. These findings demonstrate that membrane microparticles released from stimulated PMNs are competent inflammatory mediators to produce EC activation and cytokine gene induction.  相似文献   

8.
Airway inflammation in acute and chronic bronchitis includes a prominent neutrophil influx. Using a rat model of sulfur dioxide (SO2)-induced bronchitis, we investigated the role of the polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) chemokines macrophage inflammatory protein-2 (MIP-2) and KC. Adult female rats were exposed to 230 ppm SO2 for 5 h/day for periods of 1 day to 5 wk. Immunohistochemical identification of rat PMNs in trachea cryostat sections allowed quantitation of a marked neutrophil influx into airways of bronchitic rats (PMNs/trachea ring = 55 +/- 26.2 [1 day SO2] versus 3.6 +/- 2.7 [air]; n = 5, P < or = 0.05). Northern analysis of trachea homogenates demonstrated induction of KC and MIP-2 mRNA expression after 1 day of SO2 and persistence of increased expression after longer exposure periods examined. Pretreatment of rats with dexamethasone (0.5 mg/kg) prior to a 1-day acute SO2 exposure prevented induction of chemokine mRNA and abrogated neutrophil influx completely (PMNs/trachea ring = 6.6 +/- 8.8 versus air controls; n = 5, P = 0.96). To determine if chemokine inhibition by dexamethasone could be further studied in vitro, the rat alveolar macrophage cell line NR8383 was treated with dexamethasone (10(-7) M) before stimulation with lipopolysaccharide (10 micrograms/ml). Pretreatment with dexamethasone substantially decreased induction of both MIP-2 and KC mRNA in response to lipopolysaccharide, indicating the potential utility of in vitro systems to identify additional anti-inflammatory agents. These studies support the hypothesis that the chemokines MIP-2 and KC mediate airway neutrophil influx in both acute and chronic SO2-induced bronchitis in the rat.  相似文献   

9.
Beta-chemokines induce the directional migration of monocytes and T lymphocytes and are thus associated with chronic inflammation. Using immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridisation (ISH) techniques, we have examined the expression of the beta-chemokines monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1alpha, MIP-1beta, and RANTES (regulated upon activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted) in post-mortem human brain from multiple sclerosis (MS) cases, at different stages of lesion development. In actively demyelinating MS plaques RANTES expression was restricted to the blood vessel endothelium, perivascular cells and surrounding astrocytes, suggesting a role in the recruitment of inflammatory cells from the circulation. MCP-1 was expressed by astrocytes and macrophages within acute MS lesions, but was restricted to reactive astrocytes in the parenchyma surrounding the lesion. MIP-1alpha was expressed by astrocytes and macrophages within the plaque, while MIP-1beta was expressed by macrophages and microglia within the lesion, and by microglia in surrounding white matter. Glial cells may be stimulated to produce chemokines and continue the local inflammatory response by forming chemotactic gradients to attract T cells and mononuclear phagocytes from the circulation and surrounding tissue.  相似文献   

10.
Increased vascular endothelial cell (EC) permeability and neutrophilic leukocyte (PMN) diapedesis through paracellular gaps are cardinal features of acute inflammation. Activation of the EC contractile apparatus is necessary and sufficient to increase vascular permeability in specific models of EC barrier dysfunction. However, it is unknown whether EC contraction with subsequent paracellular gap formation is required for PMN transendothelial migration in response to chemotactic factors. To test this possibility, we assessed migration of human PMNs across confluent bovine pulmonary arterial EC monolayers. Transendothelial PMN migration in the absence of a chemotactic gradient was minimal, whereas abluminal addition of leukotriene B4 (LTB4; 5 microM) resulted in significantly increased PMN migration. Reductions in EC myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) activity by EC monolayer pretreatment with specific MLCK inhibitors (KT-5926 or ML-7) or by increases in cAMP-protein kinase A activity (cholera toxin) significantly reduced PMN transmigration (30-70% inhibition). In contrast, pretreatment with the myosin-associated phosphatase inhibitor calyculin resulted in the accumulation of phosphorylated myosin light chains, EC contraction, and significantly enhanced PMN migration. Finally, the interaction of PMNs with 32P-labeled EC monolayers was shown to directly increase EC myosin phosphorylation in a time-dependent fashion. Taken together, these results are consistent with the hypothesis that the phosphorylation status of EC myosin regulates PMN migration and further indicate that EC MLCK is activated by chemoattractant-stimulated PMNs. Neutrophil-dependent activation of the EC contractile apparatus with subsequent paracellular gap formation may be a key determinant of transendothelial PMN migration responses to chemotactic agents.  相似文献   

11.
Modeling Salmonella-epithelial cell interaction in vitro has led to the realization that epithelial cells are crucial in orchestrating neutrophil (PMN) responses, in part by stimulating basolateral release of epithelial chemokines, including IL-8. However, such basolaterally released chemokines, while likely important in orchestration of PMN movement across the subepithelial matrix, are unlikely to be responsible for the final step of transepithelial migration of PMN and entry into the apical compartment. We now show that S. typhimurium attachment to T84 cell apical epithelial membranes induces polarized apical secretion of a pathogen-elicited epithelial chemoattractant (PEEC) bioactivity. Experiments employing semipurified PEEC indicate that it is released in a polarized apical fashion and is sufficient to explain the observed final step of transepithelial migration of PMN induced by Salmonella-apical membrane interaction. By preliminary physical characterization and profiles of PMN activation, PEEC appears to be a novel PMN chemotactic bioactivity. This 1- to 3-kDa nominal molecular mass chemokine-like bioactivity directly stimulates PMN via a pertussis toxin-sensitive receptor and elicits a Ca2+ signal. While these latter features are shared by most other chemokines, analysis of PEEC-elicited PMN activation reveals that, unlike these other agonists, PEEC, even at saturating concentrations, elicits chemotactic activity in the absence of stimulation of superoxide production and/or release of primary and/or secondary granules. These data suggest that the apically released PEEC activity appears to represent a novel epithelial-derived chemoattractant that directs PMN movement across epithelial monolayers.  相似文献   

12.
Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) is a CD4+ T cell-mediated, inflammatory demyelinating disease of the central nervous system (CNS) that serves as a model for the human demyelinating disease, multiple sclerosis. A critical event in the pathogenesis of EAE is the entry of both Ag-specific T lymphocytes and Ag-nonspecific mononuclear cells into the CNS. In the present report we investigated the role of two C-C chemokines (macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha (MIP-1 alpha) and monocyte chemotactic protein-1) and a C-x-C chemokine (MIP-2) in the pathogenesis of EAE. Production in the CNS of MIP-1 alpha, but not that of MIP-2, a rodent homologue of IL-8, or monocyte chemotactic protein-1, correlated with development of severe clinical disease. Administration of anti-MIP-1 alpha, but not that of anti-monocyte chemotactic protein-1, prevented the development of both acute and relapsing paralytic disease as well as infiltration of mononuclear cells into the CNS initiated by the transfer of neuroantigen peptide-activated T cells. Ab therapy could also be used to ameliorate the severity of ongoing clinical disease. Anti-MIP-1 alpha did not affect the activation of encepahlitogenic T cells as measured by cytokine secretion, surface marker expression, and ability to adoptively transfer EAE. These results demonstrate that MIP-1 alpha plays an important role in directing the chemoattraction of mononuclear inflammatory cells in the T cell-mediated autoimmune disease, EAE.  相似文献   

13.
The epidemic form of the hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) in children is hallmarked by endothelial cell damage, most predominantly displayed by the glomerular capillaries. The influx of mononuclear (MO) and polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs) into the glomeruli may be an important event in the initiation, prolongation, and progression of glomerular endothelial cell damage in HUS patients. The molecular mechanisms for the recruitment of these leukocytes into the kidney are unclear, but monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) and IL-8 are suggested to be prime candidates. In this study, we analyzed the presence of both chemokines in 24-h urinary (n = 15) and serum (n = 14) samples of HUS children by specific ELISAs. Furthermore, kidney biopsies of three different HUS children were examined for MO and PMN cell infiltration by histochemical techniques and electron microscopy. Whereas the chemokines MCP-1 and IL-8 were present in only very limited amounts in urine of 17 normal control subjects, serial samples of HUS patients demonstrated significantly elevated levels of both chemokines. HUS children with anuria showed higher initial and maximum chemokine levels than their counterparts without anuria. A strong positive correlation was observed between urinary MCP-1 and IL-8 levels. Whereas initial serum IL-8 levels were significantly increased in HUS children, serum MCP-1 levels were only slightly elevated compared with serum MCP-1 in control children. No correlation was found between urinary and serum chemokine concentrations. Histologic and EM studies of HUS biopsy specimens clearly showed the presence of MOs and to a lesser extent of PMNs in the glomeruli. The present data suggest an important local role for MOs and PMNs in the process of glomerular endothelial-cell damage. The chemokines MCP-1 and IL-8 may possibly be implicated in the pathogenesis of HUS through the recruitment and activation of MOs and PMNs, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
Extension of recombinant human RANTES by a single residue at the amino terminus is sufficient to produce a potent and selective antagonist. RANTES is a proinflammatory cytokine that promotes cell accumulation and activation in chronic inflammatory diseases. When mature RANTES was expressed heterologously in Escherichia coli, the amino-terminal initiating methionine was not removed by the endogenous amino peptidases. This methionylated protein was fully folded but completely inactive in RANTES bioassays of calcium mobilization and chemotaxis of the promonocytic cell line THP-1. However, when assayed as an antagonist of both RANTES and macrophage inflammatory polypeptide-1 alpha (MIP-1 alpha) in these assays, the methionylated RANTES (Met-RANTES) inhibited the actions of both chemokines. T cell chemotaxis was similarly inhibited. The antagonistic effect was selective since Met-RANTES had no effect on interleukin-8- or monocyte chemotractant protein-1-induced responses in these cells. Met-RANTES can compete with both [125I]RANTES and [125I]IMP-1 alpha binding to THP-1 cells or to stably transfected HEK cells recombinantly expressing their common receptor, CC-CKR-1. These data show that the integrity of the amino terminus of RANTES is crucial to receptor binding and cellular activation.  相似文献   

15.
Hemofiltrate C-C chemokine (HCC)-1 is a recently cloned C-C chemokine that is structurally similar to macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1alpha. Unlike most chemokines, it is constitutively secreted by tissues and is present at high concentrations in normal human plasma. Also atypical for chemokines, HCC-1 is reported not to be chemotactic for leukocytes. In this paper, we have investigated the chemokine receptor usage and downstream signaling pathways of HCC-1. Cross-desensitization experiments using THP-1 cells suggested that HCC-1 and MIP-1alpha activated the same receptor. Experiments using a panel of cloned chemokine receptors revealed that HCC-1 specifically activated C-C chemokine receptor (CCR)1, but not closely related receptors, including CCR5. HCC-1 competed with MIP-1alpha for binding to CCR1-transfected cells, but with a markedly reduced affinity (IC50 = 93 nM versus 1.3 nM for MIP-1alpha). Similarly, HCC-1 was less potent than MIP-1alpha in inducing inhibition of adenylyl cyclase in CCR1-transfected cells. HCC-1 induced chemotaxis of freshly isolated human monocytes, THP-1 cells, and CCR1-transfected cells, and the optimal concentration for cell migration (100 nM) was approximately 100-fold lower than that of MIP-1alpha (1 nM). These data demonstrate that HCC-1 is a chemoattractant and identify CCR1 as a functional HCC-1 receptor on human monocytes.  相似文献   

16.
TGF-beta isoforms regulate numerous cellular functions including cell growth and differentiation, the cellular synthesis and secretion of extracellular matrix proteins, such as fibronectin (Fn), and the immune response. We have previously shown that TGF-beta 1 is the most potent chemoattractant described for human peripheral blood neutrophils (PMNs), suggesting that TGF-beta s may play a role in the recruitment of PMNs during the initial phase of the inflammatory response. In our current studies, we demonstrate that the maximal chemotactic response was attained near 40 fM for all mammalian TGF-beta isoforms. However, there was a statistically significant difference in migratory distance of the PMNs: TGF-beta 2 (556 microM) > TGF-beta 3 (463 microM) > TGF-beta 1 (380 microM) (beta 2: beta 3, p < or = 0.010; beta 3: beta 1, p < or = 0.04; beta 2: beta 1, p < or = 0.0012). A mAb to the cell binding domain (CBD) of Fn inhibited the chemotactic response to TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 3 by 63% and to TGF-beta 2 by 70%, whereas the response to FMLP, a classic chemoattractant, was only inhibited by 18%. In contrast, a mAb to a C-terminal epitope of Fn did not retard migration (< 1.5%). The Arg-gly-Asp-ser tetrapeptide inhibited chemotaxis by approximately the same extent as the anti-CBD (52 to 83%). Furthermore, a mAb against the VLA-5 integrin (VLA-5; Fn receptor) also inhibited TGF-beta-induced chemotaxis. These results indicate that chemotaxis of PMNs in response to TGF-beta isoforms is mediated by the interaction of the Arg-gly-Asp-ser sequence in the CBD of Fn with an integrin on the PMN cell surface, primarily the VLA-5 integrin. TGF-beta isoforms also elicited the release of cellular Fn from PMNs; we observed a 2.3-fold increase in Fn (389 to 401 ng/ml) in the supernatants of TGF-beta-stimulated PMNs compared with unstimulated cells (173.6 ng/ml). The concentration of TGF-beta required to cause maximal release of Fn from PMNs (4000 fM) is a concentration at which TGF-beta is no longer chemotactic, suggesting that PMNs only use Fn that is constitutively expressed for migration. At higher concentrations of TGF-beta, the Fn released may accumulate basal to the cell, ultimately retarding cellular migration and modulating the chemotactic response.  相似文献   

17.
Differentiation-dependent thymocyte migration in the thymus may be important for T lymphopoiesis and might be regulated by thymic chemoattractants. We examined modulation of chemotactic responsiveness of thymocyte subsets during their early to late stages of development in response to 2 thymus-expressed chemokines, SDF-1 and CKbeta-11/MIP-3beta/ELC. SDF-1 shows chemotactic preference for immature thymocytes (subsets of triple negative thymocytes and double positive [DP] subset) over mature single positive (SP) thymocytes. CKbeta-11/MIP-3beta/ELC shows low chemotactic activity on the immature thymocytes, but it strongly attracts mature SP thymocytes, effects opposite to that of SDF-1. SDF-1-dependent chemoattraction of immature thymocytes is not significantly desensitized by a negative concentration gradient of CKbeta-11/MIP-3beta/ELC, and chemoattraction of mature SP thymocytes to CKbeta-11/MIP-3beta/ELC is not antagonized by SDF-1, demonstrating that these two chemokines have different chemoattractant preferences for thymocyte subsets and would probably not inhibit each other's chemotaxis in the event of microenvironmental coexpression. The chemotactic responsiveness of thymocytes and mature T cells to the 2 chemokines is respectively enhanced after selection process and migration to the spleen. These studies demonstrate the presence of thymocyte chemoattractants with differential chemotactic preference for thymocytes, a possible mechanism for thymocyte migration in the thymus.  相似文献   

18.
C-C chemokines play an important role in recruitment of T lymphocytes to inflammatory sites. T lymphocytes secrete chemokines, but the activation requirements for chemokine production by T cells are uncertain. We studied the regulation of C-C chemokine production by CD28 costimulatory signals by murine T lymphocytes. Splenocytes from BALB/c mice cultured with anti-CD3 mAb expressed macrophage-inflammatory protein (MIP)-1alpha mRNA and secreted MIP-1alpha, which was inhibited by anti-B7-1 plus anti-B7-2 mAbs. MIP-1alpha production by Ag-stimulated T cells from DO.11.10 TCR transgenic mice was augmented by anti-CD28 mAb and increased compared with DO.11.10/CD28(-/-) cells. When T cell costimulation was provided by IL-2, MIP-1alpha was not enhanced. Studies with IL-2, IL-4, STAT4, and STAT6 knock-out mice suggested that chemokine production is controlled by pathways different from those regulating T cell differentiation. Thus, CD28 costimulation may amplify an immune response by stimulating T cell survival, proliferation, and production of chemokines that recruit T cells to inflammatory sites.  相似文献   

19.
The beta-chemokine macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha (MIP-1alpha) is chemotactic for many hemopoietic cell types and can inhibit hemopoietic stem cell (HSC) proliferation, effects mediated through G-protein coupled heptahelical receptors. We have isolated cDNAs for seven chemokine receptors, CCR-1 to -5, MIP-1alphaRL1, and a novel cDNA, D6. Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing CCR-1, -3, -5, and D6 bound 125I-murine MIP-1alpha: the order of affinity was D6 > CCR-5 > CCR-1 > CCR-3. Each bound a distinct subset of other beta-chemokines: the order of competition for 125I-murine MIP-1alpha on D6 was murine MIP-1alpha > human and murine MIP-1beta > human RANTES approximately JE > human MCP-3 > human MCP-1. Human MIP-1alpha and the alpha-chemokines did not compete. Like other chemokine receptors, D6 induced transient increases in [Ca2+] in HEK 293 cells upon ligand binding. D6 mRNA was abundant in lung and detectable in many other tissues. Bone marrow cell fractionation demonstrated T-cell and macrophage/monocyte expression of D6, and CCR-1, -3, and -5. Moreover, we could detect expression of CCR-3, CCR-5, and to a greater extent D6 in a cell population enriched for HSCs. Thus, we have characterized four murine beta chemokine receptors that are likely involved in mediating the pro-inflammatory functions of MIP-1alpha and other chemokines, and we present D6, CCR-3, and CCR-5 as candidate receptors in MIP-1alpha-induced HSC inhibition.  相似文献   

20.
Leukocyte emigration and alveolar macrophage-derived cytokines may contribute to lung microvascular injury associated with adult respiratory distress syndrome. We have used mAbs against cell adhesion molecules on leukocytes (anti-CD18 and anti-CD49d) or against IL-8 to investigate these contributions. Intratracheal (i.t.) instillation of LPS (50 microg/kg) caused a significant increase in bronchoalveolar lavage polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) without an increase in mononuclear cells (MNCs) or an increase in lung permeability. Injection of LPS (10 microg/kg) i.v. at 24 h after i.t. LPS caused significant increases in bronchoalveolar lavage PMNs, MNCs, IL-8, and monocyte chemotactic protein-1, as well as increases in lung permeability. Rabbits that were administered i.t. LPS followed by i.v. LPS and treated with anti-CD18 mAb had a significantly lower lung permeability index and emigration of fewer PMNs but no change in MNC emigration compared with saline treatment. Anti-IL-8 mAb treatment resulted in a significantly lower lung permeability index with no change in PMN emigration compared with no treatment. These results suggest that PMN emigration is necessary but not sufficient for the development of LPS-induced lung injury, and that IL-8 plays a significant role in PMN-dependent lung injury, independent of PMN emigration.  相似文献   

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