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Query: DrugBank:BIOD00035 (
CSF
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30,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a search for specific serum markers with prognostic impact in Hodgkin's Disease (HD), we evaluated the clinical significance of several cytokines (IL-1 beta, IL-2, IL-3, IL-6, G-CSF,
GM-CSF
,
TNF-alpha
) and soluble forms of membrane-derived antigens (sCD4, sCD8, sCD23, sCD25, sCD30) in the serum of patients with untreated HD. Elevations of three groups of serum factors were observed: Firstly, elevations of the hematopoietic cytokines
GM-CSF
(detected in 39%), IL-6 (57%) and IL-3 (13%), which occurred simultaneously in the majority of the cases; secondly, simultaneous elevations of the inflammatory cytokines
TNF-alpha
and IL-1 beta (detected in 7%); and finally, elevations of membrane-derived activation antigens sCD8, sCD25, and sCD30. While the cytokine levels did not correlate with other obvious parameters, the membrane-derived activation antigens sCD8, sCD25 and sCD30 were associated with a poor prognosis. Only sCD30 correlated with disease activity and holds promise for the follow-up of patients in remission. Further investigations of these parameters at the cellular level might help to elucidate the enigmatic biology of HD.
...
PMID:The clinical significance of cytokines and soluble forms of membrane-derived activation antigens in the serum of patients with Hodgkin's disease. 128 46
Cytokines (IL-1, sIL-2R, IL-3, IL-6,
TNF-alpha
, IFN-gamma,
GM-CSF
and neopterin) were measured in sera of 37 patients with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, 10 healthy pregnant and 10 healthy non-pregnant controls. With the exception of neopterin (p = 0.004) there were no statistically significant differences in cytokine concentrations between healthy pregnant and non-pregnant controls. No statistically relevant differences between healthy pregnant women and hypertensive patients could be found in cytokines of T-lymphocytic origin except
GM-CSF
in patients with HELLP syndrome (p = 0.02). Elevated levels of IL-6,
TNF-alpha
and neopterin were observed in hypertensive women. Differences to healthy pregnant controls were statistically significant for IL-6 (p = 0.008),
TNF-alpha
(p = 0.009) and neopterin (p = 0.04) and were more pronounced in severe forms of the disease. These 3 parameters of monocytic origin showed significant positive correlations amongst each other. A participation of cell-mediated immunity (especially monocytes/macrophages) in the pathomechanism of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy can thus be assumed.
...
PMID:[Cellular immunity in pregnancy-induced hypertensive diseases]. 129 33
Fu-Ling, the sclederma of Poria cocos (Schw.) Wolf, has long been used as a sedative and diuretic. However, data in this report suggest that Fu-Ling is a potential suppressor of cytokine secretion from human peripheral blood monocytes under in vitro condition. Monocyte culture medium containing 10% of Fu-Ling extract significantly inhibited secretion of
TNF-alpha
, IL-beta, IL-6 and
GM-CSF
from the monocyte monolayer. However, as Fu-Ling extract content was gradually reduced, cytokine secretion was augmented in comparison with the cytokine secretion in drug-free controls. This augmentative effect resulted from the trace amount (1.24 ng/ml in 0.62% of Fu-Ling extract) of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) which contaminated the Fu-Ling extract during the preparation process, since
TNF-alpha
, IL-1 beta and IL-6 secretion induced by 0.62% Fu-Ling extract could be significantly inhibited by polymyxin B, an LPS inhibitor. Furthermore, the amounts of
TNF-alpha
IL-1 beta and IL-6 induced by 1 ng/ml of LPS without the presence of drug were more than that induced by 0.62% of Fu-Ling extract. Thus, cytokine secretion induced by LPS contamination (1.24 ng/ml) in the Fu-Ling extract was partially suppressed by 0.62% of the Fu-Ling extract itself.
GM-CSF
secretion in the medium containing 0.62% of Fu-Ling extract was not induced by LPS since: a)
GM-CSF
induced by 0.62% Fu-Ling extract could not be inhibited by polymyxin B; b) LPS at 1 ng/ml showed no activity indicating induction of
GM-CSF
secretion.
...
PMID:Suppression of tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-1 beta, interleukin-6 and granulocyte-monocyte colony stimulating factor secretion from human monocytes by an extract of Poria cocos. 130 45
In previous studies on patients with juvenile chronic myelogenous leukaemia (JCML), we found excessive proliferation of malignant monocyte-macrophage elements in the absence of exogenous growth factor, and impaired growth of normal haematopoietic progenitors. In the current study, six newly-diagnosed JCML patients were investigated to characterize the disease further. In co-cultures, JCML cell culture supernatant as well as patient plasma obtained at diagnosis produced a striking reduction in numbers of control marrow BFU-E, CFU-GM, CFU-Meg and CFU-GEMM colonies. Monoclonal anti-tumour necrosis factor alpha neutralizing antibodies (anti-
TNF-alpha
Ab) abolished these inhibitory properties. In sharp contrast, JCML supernatants exerted a marked growth-promoting effect on autologous JCML cells cultured in clonogenic assays. Anti-
TNF-alpha
Ab and anti-granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor neutralizing antibodies (anti-
GM-CSF
Ab) both reversed the stimulating effect. Recombinant
GM-CSF
and recombinant TNF alpha produced a profound increase in JCML colonies when tested individually and anti-
GM-CSF
Ab reversed the
TNF-alpha
effect. Expression studies of
TNF-alpha
and
TNF-alpha
receptor genes of cultured JCML cells demonstrated mRNAs for both. Further,
TNF-alpha
activity was assayed in a wide variety of cell culture supernatants and in normal and patients' plasma, and only the JCML specimens showed increased
TNF-alpha
values. Recombinant interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) also stimulated JCML colony growth, but polyclonal anti-IL-1 neutralizing antibodies did not suppress JCML colony numbers nor did it reverse the effects of
TNF-alpha
or
GM-CSF
. The evidence indicated that the JCML monokine which inhibits normal haematopoiesis is
TNF-alpha
and that the endogenously-produced
TNF-alpha
and
GM-CSF
from JCML cells play an important role in the pathogenesis of the disease by acting as autocrine growth factors. IL-1 alpha also stimulates JCML cell proliferation as an accessory factor and augments the effect of
GM-CSF
,
TNF-alpha
or both.
...
PMID:Central role of tumour necrosis factor, GM-CSF, and interleukin 1 in the pathogenesis of juvenile chronic myelogenous leukaemia. 131 Nov 95
Human peripheral blood polymorphonuclear leukocytes (HPPMN) from healthy individuals are not primed and, hence, weak stimulation-dependent responses are induced by certain stimuli which bind to membrane receptors. When HPPMN were exposed to recombinant human tumor necrosis factor alpha (rHuTNF-alpha) or recombinant human granulocyte colony stimulating factor (rG-CSF), they underwent priming and the rate of superoxide anion (O.-2) generation was increased by subsequent exposure to formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP) or opsonized zymosan (OZ). However, the degree of enhancement was very small upon exposure to phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) or dioctanoyl glycerol (DOG). The oxygen burst induced by FMLP or OZ was inhibited by genistein and alpha-cyano-3-ethoxy-4-hydroxy-5-phenylthiomethylcinnamamid (ST638), which are inhibitors of tyrosine kinase (TK), and was enhanced by 1-(5-isoquinoline-sulfonyl)-3-methyl-piperazine (H-7) and staurosporine, which are inhibitors of protein kinase C (PKC). Without priming, however, O.-2 generation from HPPMN by high concentrations of FMLP was not inhibited strongly by genistein or ST638. On the contrary, the oxygen burst induced by PMA or DOG was stimulated by genistein or ST638 and was inhibited by H-7 or staurosporine. Furthermore, O.-2 generation by guinea pig peritoneal neutrophils, which are already primed in vivo, was induced markedly by FMLP by a mechanism which was stimulated by a low concentration of genistein or ST638. Thus, FMLP-mediated O.-2-generation of HPPMN is coupled with rHuTNF-alpha- or rG-
CSF
-priming and is inhibited by TK inhibitors, whereas PMA- or DOG-induced O.-2 generation is not coupled with
TNF-alpha
or G-CSF-priming and is inhibited by PKC inhibitors. These results suggest that both PKC and TK play critical roles in the regulatory mechanism of priming and NADPH-oxidase activation in neutrophils.
...
PMID:Modulation of TNF-alpha-priming and stimulation-dependent superoxide generation in human neutrophils by protein kinase inhibitors. 131 9
The effects of different recombinant human cytokines and cytokine inhibitors were compared in a culture system in which cell contact with mutant EL-4 thymoma cells of murine origin efficiently stimulates human B cell proliferation and Ig secretion in conjunction with human T cell supernatant. IL-1 alpha, IL-1 beta,
TNF-alpha
, and IL-2 co-stimulated B cell proliferation and IgM, IgG, and IgA secretion, whereas IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, IFN-gamma, or
GM-CSF
had weak or no activity in this regard. In contrast, TGF-beta 1 was strongly inhibitory. A very strict hierarchy of cytokine interactions was found in that IL-1 was necessary to induce
TNF-alpha
responsiveness, and
TNF-alpha
the IL-2 responsiveness, of the B cells. Most likely the small number of starting B cells in the present assay (300 FACS-separated B cells/200 microliters) minimized the effects of autocrine B cell factors. IL-4 together with IL-1 induced IgE secretion, and the IgE secretion was further increased by
TNF-alpha
. IFN-gamma had no modulatory effect on the IL-4 dependent IgE response in this system. Pretreatment of B cells with IL-1R antagonist (IL-1ra, which binds to IL-1R) or addition of soluble TNF receptor type 1 (sTNF-R55, which binds to TNF) completely inhibited the IL-1 or
TNF-alpha
effects, respectively. This occurred in a specific manner; the inhibition was reversed by a large excess of cytokine. IL-1ra also inhibited a B cell response induced by PMA-preactivated EL-4 cells alone. Because B cells responding to such preactivated EL-4 cells did not acquire
TNF-alpha
responsiveness, no IL-1 was apparently involved under this assay condition. It appears, therefore, 1) that IL-1ra can act on B cells and 2) that this antagonist may not only block IL-1R, but may provide a direct or indirect inhibitory signal interfering even with IL-1-independent B cell activation.
...
PMID:Effects of eleven cytokines and of IL-1 and tumor necrosis factor inhibitors in a human B cell assay. 131 59
One of the morphologic hallmarks of human gliomas are inflammatory infiltrates with accumulation of macrophages in the tumor site. The signals leading to the macrophage response are only at the beginning of being understood. Novel chemotactic factors that have recently been characterized as secretory products of glioblastoma cells may attract mononuclear cells from the blood. Within the tumor tissue blood-derived monocytes and macrophages of the brain tissue, the microglial cells, may increase in cell numbers due to tumor-derived growth factors. Both astrocytoma cell lines and cultured astrocytes have been shown recently to produce granulocyte-macrophage (GM)-
CSF
. We show that in vitro not only astrocytoma but also glioblastoma cell lines secrete
GM-CSF
when stimulated with
TNF-alpha
or IL-1. However, there is no evidence for
GM-CSF
production by glioblastoma cells in vivo: fresh tumor samples lack the mRNA for
GM-CSF
and the protein is not detectable in the tumor cyst fluids or the cerebrospinal fluids of glioblastoma patients. This contrasts IL-1 and IL-6 that are detectable in the tumor cyst fluids and IL-6 also in the cerebrospinal fluids of the patients. Unlike
GM-CSF
, transforming growth factor-beta 2 mRNA is expressed in ex vivo tested glioblastoma tissues. Absence of
GM-CSF
in vivo may be explained by the presence of tumor-derived inhibitory factors, such as transforming growth factor-beta 2 and PGE which suppress
GM-CSF
production by glioblastoma cells in vitro. The accumulation of macrophages at the tumor site may be due to local elaboration of chemoattractants and/or not yet defined growth factors rather than due to
GM-CSF
production.
...
PMID:Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) production by glioblastoma cells. Despite the presence of inducing signals GM-CSF is not expressed in vivo. 131 29
We investigated a broad spectrum of immunoactive mediators in a mouse model of influenza. ICR mice (4-5 wk old) that were infected with a 10 LD50 dose of influenza A/PR8/34 virus died after 6 days without evidence of bacterial superinfection. Maximal virus titers were reached by day 2 postinfection, whereas the multifocal pneumonia with mononuclear cell infiltration reached its maximum at the end of infection. We measured the cytokines IL-1 alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IL-6, IFN-gamma,
TNF-alpha
, granulocyte (G)/macrophage (M)-
CSF
, G-CSF, M-CSF, and the lipid mediators leukotriene B4 and platelet-activating factor in the cellfree bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of mice during infection. We found an early increase of IL-1 alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-6,
TNF-alpha
,
GM-CSF
, IFN-gamma, and leukotriene B4. Levels of these factors peaked between 36 h and day 3 postinfection, with the exception of IL-6 that remained at elevated levels throughout infection. G-CSF and M-CSF increased slowly and reached a maximum by day 5 postinfection. We were unable to detect IL-2, IL-3, or IL-4. PAF remained at the same level throughout infection. Our results suggest that lung-resident cells, and possibly the alveolar macrophages, participate actively in the onset of the inflammatory response against the invading virus. The inability to detect the T cell products IL-2, IL-3, and IL-4 was unexpected considering the role of T cells in the elimination of the virus in infected mice. Our observation confirms thus earlier findings about the inability of specific T cell clones to elicit an unspecific antiviral effect.
...
PMID:A kinetic study of immune mediators in the lungs of mice infected with influenza A virus. 132 55
In an attempt to construct bispecific monoclonal antibodies (bimAbs) able to target cytotoxic T lymphocytes against human hepatoma cells, an HGPRT-deficient mutant of the Hepama-6 hybridoma, which produces an antihuman-hepatoma mAb, was directly fused with splenocytes from Balb/C mice immunized by a polyclonal cytotoxic T-cell line. Hybrid hybridomas were selected in HAT medium, and their supernatants were directly screened for the ability to induce IL-2-cultured cytotoxic T lymphocytes to kill hepatoma cells in a 51Cr-release assay. The selected hybrid hybridoma, termed DQ-33, secretes a bimAb, which reacts with a CD3-associated determinant. When resting peripheral-blood lymphocytes were used as effector cells, virtually no cytolytic activity could be induced by DQ-33, whereas phytohemagglutinin-activated lymphocytes that had been expanded in vitro in IL-2-containing medium could be efficiently targeted against hepatoma cells. Targeting by DQ-33 bimAb was analyzed on different subsets of IL-2-cultured lymphocytes. It was evident that CD+4-8+ TCR alpha/beta+ and CD3+4-8-TCR gamma/delta+ lymphocytes were efficiently induced by bimAb to lyse human hepatoma cells, whereas no induction of cytolysis could be observed when CD3 + 4 + 8-TCR alpha/beta+ cells were used as effectors. DQ-33 bimAb was also able to induce lymphokine secretion (IL-2,
GM-CSF
and
TNF-alpha
) by all the different subsets of lymphocytes analyzed in the presence of target cells expressing the relevant antigen, independent of the expression of cytolytic activity.
...
PMID:Targeting of "T" lymphocytes against human hepatoma cells by a bispecific monoclonal antibody: role of different lymphocyte subsets. 132 41
Autocrine production of growth factors is thought to be an essential element in the development of hemopoietic tumors in vivo. Tumor-derived cell lines frequently show this capability in vitro. It is not understood how autonomous growth in vitro is maintained by lymphoid cell lines that are not of tumorigenic origin. We have previously established human B cell clones that proliferate in serum-free media with unlimited potential. However, the cells need a critical density for continuous growth. Culture supernatant conditioned by these cell lines sustained proliferation even in low density cultures. All B cell clones analyzed were found to secrete the cytokines IL-1 alpha, IL-6,
TNF-alpha
, and TNF-beta whereas no activity of IL-2, IL-4, low m. w.-B cell growth factor,
CSF
, or IFN-gamma was recorded. In low density cultures supplemented with rIL-1 alpha, +/- IL-6, +/-
TNF-alpha
, and +/- TNF-beta together, B cell proliferation is maintained to the same extent as with conditioned medium. Addition of anti-sense oligonucleotides directed to the mRNA of IL-1 alpha, IL-6, and
TNF-alpha
, respectively, resulted in growth arrest and cell death. This effect could be prevented by supplementation with these cytokines. Scatchard plot analyses and internalization studies revealed that the cells express on their surface high affinity receptors for IL-1 alpha, IL-6, and TNF, respectively, and internalize the cytokines from the supernatant. These results demonstrate that (i) autonomous growth of immortalized B cells is maintained by secretion and reinternalization of IL-1 alpha, IL-6,
TNF-alpha
, and TNF-beta, (ii) these cytokines act in a synergistic fashion, and (iii) autocrine growth stimulation of human B cells in vitro does not necessarily represent their tumorigenic potential in vivo.
...
PMID:Four cell-secreted cytokines act synergistically to maintain long term proliferation of human B cell lines in vitro. 132 86
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