Slow release of soluble TNF receptors by monocytes in vitro.

J Immunol

Department of Surgery, University of Limburg, Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Published: April 1994

In this study, we investigated the release of soluble(s) TNF-R by PBMC in vitro. T cell activation by mAb anti-CD3, as well as activation with phorbol esters (PMA), enhanced the release of both sTNF-R55 and sTNF-R75 by PBMC. In contrast to shedding of TNF-R by neutrophils upon activation, release of sTNF-R by PBMC proved to be a relatively slow process, reaching a plateau after 2 days of culture. Monocytes appeared to be the main source of the released sTNF-R, whereas activation of purified T cells induced only a minor release of sTNF-R as compared with the whole cell population. To unravel the mechanism, a number of cytokines were added during a 2-day culture of cells. IL-10 enhanced sTNF-R levels with similar kinetics as mAb anti-CD3 and PMA, whereas the other cytokines tested did not affect the release of sTNF-R by PBMC, pure T lymphocytes, or purified monocytes, either activated or not. Conversely, inhibitors of cytokines were added during the activation period to study the effect of endogenously produced cytokines on sTNF-R release. mAb anti-IL-10 and IL-1ra partly sTNF-R release, whereas other inhibitors did not affect the release. The results obtained in vitro may extend our insight in the mechanism via which sTNF-R are enhanced in vivo during inflammatory reactions.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

release stnf-r
12
release
8
mab anti-cd3
8
stnf-r
8
stnf-r pbmc
8
affect release
8
stnf-r release
8
activation
5
slow release
4
release soluble
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!