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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (SEM)
47,337 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this study, we have attempted to determine whether mouse peritoneal mast cells released histamine in response to IL-3. Recombinant mouse (m)IL-3 induced histamine release from mouse peritoneal mast cells in a dose-dependent fashion. Histamine release did not occur in the absence of phosphatidyl serine (PS), and was dependent on PS concentrations. The release was 14.3 +/- 3.8 and 43.5 +/- 11.5% (mean +/- SEM, n = 5) at 1 nM IL-3 in the presence of 10 and 20 micrograms/ml of PS. Calcium was required for the response, and in the absence of calcium, significant histamine release was not observed. The kinetics were slower than those of anti-IgE-induced response. IL-3-induced histamine release reached a peak within 15 min, while that by anti-IgE reached 80% of the maximum in 3 min. Lower concentrations of IL-3, which failed to directly induce histamine release, did not enhance anti-IgE-induced histamine release. Other cytokines, including mIL-4, mIL-5, m-granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, human (h)IL-1 alpha, hIL-1 beta and hIL-8, neither induced histamine release nor enhanced anti-IgE induced histamine release. IL-4 had no capacity to enhance IL-3-induced histamine release. These results suggest that locally produced IL-3 might modulate mast cell-related inflammation through histamine release from mast cells.
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PMID:Mouse IL-3 induces histamine release from mouse peritoneal mast cells. 138 45

A number of natural and recombinant human cytokines have been tested for their ability to activate basophil and neutrophil adhesiveness for human umbilical vein endothelial cells in vitro. Coincubation of basophils and endothelial cell monolayers for 10 min with biologically relevant concentrations of rIL-1, natural IL-2, rIL-4, rIL-5, rIL-6, rIL-8, rGM-CSF, and rIFN-gamma had no effect on basophil adhesiveness. In contrast, rIL-3 induced basophil adhesiveness for endothelial cells (optimal at 1 ng/ml: 144 +/- 18% of control adherence (mean +/- SEM); control basophil binding, 13 +/- 3%, n = 9, p less than or equal to 0.05). This increase in adhesiveness was similar in magnitude to that induced by an optimal concentration of a known potent inducer of basophil adhesiveness (1 microM FMLP, 164 +/- 15% of control adherence, n = 9). Under these experimental conditions, the effects of rIL-3 occurred at concentrations of 0.1 to 30 ng/ml, were partially dependent on calcium, and were not accompanied by histamine release. Fixation experiments demonstrated that the effect of rIL-3 was directed against the basophil rather than the endothelial cell. Neither rIL-3 nor the other cytokines tested had any effect on the adherence of 51Cr-labeled neutrophils, even when tested simultaneously on cells from the same donors. Under experimental conditions that permitted histamine release, no correlation was seen between the ability of rIL-3 (0.3 to 300 ng/ml) to induce histamine release or enhance adhesiveness (n = 8). mAb blocking experiments demonstrated a role for both CD11 and CD18 adherence glycoproteins in basophil adherence induced by rIL-3, and indirect immunofluorescence and flow cytometric analysis revealed that rIL-3 treatment led to rapid and sustained increases in cell surface expression of CD11b antigens on basophils but not neutrophils (e.g., after 10 min: 217 +/- 29 vs 91 +/- 11% of control mean fluorescence intensity, p less than 0.05). However, no correlation was seen between the magnitude of changes in CD11b expression and changes in adhesion when tested simultaneously. These results suggest that local production of IL-3 during allergic reactions in vivo may selectively promote basophil activation, adhesion to endothelium, and recruitment to extravascular sites of inflammation.
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PMID:IL-3 augments adhesiveness for endothelium and CD11b expression in human basophils but not neutrophils. 169 10

Juvenile chronic myelogenous leukemia (JCML) is a rare pediatric malignancy characterized by marked hepatosplenomegaly, leukocytosis with prominent monocytosis, elevated fetal hemoglobin, no Philadelphia chromosome, and generally a poor prognosis. In vitro, JCML peripheral blood granulocyte-macrophage progenitors (granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming units, CFU-GM) demonstrate the unique characteristic of "spontaneous" proliferation at very low cell densities in the absence of exogenous growth factors. The "spontaneous" CFU-GM proliferation can be abolished by prior adherent cell (monocyte) depletion, suggesting a paracrine mode of cellular proliferation. Although previous studies using a [3H]thymidine ([3H]TdR) incorporation assay suggested an important role for granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in JCML, many non-growth factor-related reasons for [3H]TdR incorporation and the relatively low level of inhibition of [3H]TdR uptake left those conclusions open to question. Therefore, we performed clonal CFU-GM assays, which more specifically reflect cytokine effects on CFU-GM, using JCML peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMNC) and neutralizing antibodies against GM-CSF, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), macrophage colony-stimulating (M-CSF), interleukin 3 (IL-3), interleukin 1 alpha (IL-1 alpha), interleukin 1 beta (IL-1 beta), interleukin 4 (IL-4), interleukin 6 (IL-6), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha), and interferon gamma (IFN gamma). Cultures containing anti-GM-CSF alone inhibited "spontaneous" JCML CFU-GM by 87% +/- 9% (mean +/- standard error of the mean [SEM]). No other anti-cytokine antibody produced a significant inhibition of CFU-GM growth. Various combinations of antibodies, excluding anti-GM-CSF, failed to demonstrate any synergistic inhibitory effects upon CFU-GM. Because this apparent paracrine cellular stimulation could be due to excessive cytokine production, by monocytes or other accessory cells, we examined cytokine levels in conditioned media from various JCML cell populations using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs). Monocytes from only a minority of JCML patients produced higher than normal quantities of GM-CSF, G-CSF, IL-1 beta, IL-6, and/or TNF alpha, but no obvious pattern could be discerned. Further, only 7 of 15 JCML monocyte-conditioned media (MCM) had elevated GM-CSF, and 6 of 15 JCML patients had normal levels of all nine cytokines tested. The monocyte depletion experiments and the inhibition experiments with anti-cytokine antibodies taken together demonstrate clearly that the "spontaneous" growth of JCML CFU-GM in vitro critically depends on at least one monocyte-derived growth factor, GM-CSF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The role of monocyte-derived hemopoietic growth factors in the regulation of myeloproliferation in juvenile chronic myelogenous leukemia. 191 2

The recent recognition of the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome (EMS) associated with the ingestion of L-tryptophan prompted an analysis of the peripheral blood eosinophil phenotypes and of the serum eosinophil hematopoietins in this disorder. Five patients with an illness characterized by the abrupt onset of aching skeletal muscles, edema, thickening and induration of the skin, and marked blood eosinophilia associated with L-tryptophan ingestion provided eosinophils, serum, or both, for evaluation. Gradient sedimentation density analysis of the peripheral blood eosinophils from four of these patients revealed that 43 +/- 13% (mean +/- SEM) of the cells had converted to the abnormal (hypodense) sedimenting phenotype. When normodense eosinophils from the reference donors were cultured for 3 days in medium supplemented with increasing concentrations of serum from the patients with EMS, their viability increased in a dose-dependent manner to 45%, which was significantly augmented over the effect of normal serum. This eosinophil viability-sustaining activity was inhibited by 76 +/- 7% (mean +/- SEM; n = 3) by the addition of anti-interleukin 5 (IL-5) but not by neutralizing antibodies monospecific for either granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) or IL-3. IL-5, an eosinophilopoietic factor, converts normodense peripheral blood eosinophils in vitro to a hypodense sedimenting form with extended viability and augmented biologic responses to activating stimuli. Thus, the presence of IL-5 in the sera of patients with EMS may contribute to the development and maintenance of the eosinophilia and may regulate the conversion of the peripheral blood eosinophils to the hypodense phenotype with augmented pathobiologic potential.
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PMID:Hypodense eosinophils and interleukin 5 activity in the blood of patients with the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome. 223 76

In this study, we have explored the relationship between interleukins and human basophil activation. Previous studies by ourselves and others have found that recombinant human (rh) IL-3 causes histamine release. The ability to release histamine has also been claimed for IL-1 but we cannot confirm this. In experiments with the basophils of 29 donors (excluding one D2O responder), histamine release with 100 ng/ml rhIL-1 alpha was 1.3 +/- 1% (SEM), whereas with rhIL-1 beta, it was 0.8 +/- 1%. Both IL-1 alpha and -1 beta were also used at concentrations of 0.01 to 1000 ng/ml without causing release. Neither increasing the Ca2+ concentration nor adding D2O or cytochalasin B caused IL-1 alpha and -1 beta to become secretagogues. rhIL-1, however, did augment IgE-dependent histamine release. The enhancement was similar with both rhIL-1 alpha and -1 beta, i.e. they were dose-dependent between 0.1 and 3 ng/ml and reached a plateau from 3 to 100 ng/ml. At submaximal histamine release (less than 10%), there was enhancement of three IgE-dependent secretagogues: 125% with goat anti-human IgE (n = 7), 215% with Ag E (n = 10), and 260% with a histamine releasing factor (n = 7). Non-IgE-dependent stimuli (formyl-methionine-leucine-phenylalanine and the ionophore A23187, n = 10) were enhanced less than 5%. rhIL-1-enhancement persisted after cell washing (n = 10). rhIL-1 was active in preparations of 50 to 75% pure basophils in which mononuclear cells were reduced by greater than 95% (n = 4), and mAbH34 to IL-1 beta blocked the enhancement caused by that molecule. We postulate that basophils have an IL-1 receptor which, when occupied, upregulates the response to IgE-related signals. Thus, this work characterizes a second interaction between interleukins and the cells central to the allergic response.
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PMID:Recombinant human IL-1 alpha and -1 beta potentiate IgE-mediated histamine release from human basophils. 247 85

Gibbon interleukin-3 (rIL-3) has recently been cloned and found to have a high degree of homology with the human IL-3 molecule. In this investigation, we evaluated the effects of gibbon rIL-3 on normal human peripheral blood megakaryocyte progenitor cell growth in vitro. Gibbon rIL-3 exhibited substantial megakaryocyte colony stimulatory activity (Meg-CSA), supporting peak colony numbers at a concentration of 1 U/ml. Megakaryocyte colony growth induced by rIL-3 reached 58% of the maximum achieved with the active, Meg-CSA-containing protein fraction of aplastic canine serum. Increasing gibbon rIL-3 concentrations also stimulated a 4-5-fold increase in megakaryocyte colony size and resulted in a decrease in geometric mean megakaryocyte ploidy. Ploidy values fell from 8.5N +/- 1.4 (+/- SEM) at an rIL-3 concentration of 0.1 U/ml to a minimum of 2.9N +/- 0.3 at 10 U/ml. In the presence of rIL-3 at 1.0 U/ml, megakaryocyte colony growth was linear with cell plating density and the regression line passed approximately through the origin. The effects of rIL-3 on megakaryocyte colony growth were independent of the presence of T-lymphocytes in the cultures. Cross-species evaluation of murine and gibbon IL-3 indicated that its bioactivity is species restricted. Murine IL-3 did not support colony growth from human megakaryocyte progenitors and gibbon rIL-3 showed no activity in stimulating acetylcholinesterase production by murine bone marrow cells. Gibbon rIL-3 is a potent stimulator of the early events of human megakaryocyte progenitor cell development promoting predominantly mitosis and early megakaryocytic differentiation.
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PMID:Recombinant gibbon interleukin-3 stimulates megakaryocyte colony growth in vitro from human peripheral blood progenitor cells. 326 19

This report summarizes our results of sequential treatment with IL-3 and GM-CSF following high-dose chemotherapy with respect to the yield and composition of peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC). Eight patients with high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma were included in the study. Starting 24 h after high-dose cytosine arabinoside (Ara C)/mitoxantrone, IL-3 was given for 6 days, followed by GM-CSF. The increase of circulating hematopoietic progenitor cells during leukocyte recovery varied substantially from patient to patient. Up to a 22-fold interindividual difference was observed for the peak levels of CD34+ cells. A special focus of our study was the antigenic profile of the CD34+ PBSC. On analysis of the antigenic profile of the CD34+ cells, the proportion of CD34+/HLA-DR- and CD34+/CD38- cells representing non-committed hematopoietic stem cells was consistently < 5%. The vast majority of CD34+ cells was found to coexpress CD33 (86.3 +/- 2.1%, mean +/- SEM), reflecting myeloid lineage commitment. CD71 antigen was present on 47.4 +/- 3.0% CD34+ cells with two populations (CD71dim/bright), while the percentage of early B lymphoid (CD34+/CD19+) progenitor cells was extremely low (0.38 +/- 0.13%). We therefore conclude that the cytokines currently available such as G-CSF, GM-CSF or IL-3 facilitate an ontogenetic phenomenon supporting the redistribution of hematopoietic progenitor cells after cytotoxic treatment. Six patients were autografted with the IL-3/GM-CSF-exposed blood stem cells following high-dose conditioning therapy. It is worth noting that no additional BM or hematopoietic growth factors were given post-transplantation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Autografting with peripheral blood stem cells mobilized by sequential interleukin-3/granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor following high-dose chemotherapy in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 751 Oct 17

We assessed the expression of the adhesion molecules leukocyte function antigen-1 (LFA-1, CD11a), intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1, CD54), homing-associated cell adhesion molecule (H-CAM, CD44), and c-kit (stem cell factor receptor) on the CD34+ progenitor population from the leukapheresis products of 23 patients (LP CD34+). For blood stem cell collection granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) or interleukin-3/granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (IL-3/GM-CSF) was administered after cytotoxic chemotherapy. Furthermore, bone marrow- and blood-derived CD34+ progenitor cells from 6 normal volunteers (BM and PB CD34+) were analyzed. LFA-1 expression was higher on PB CD34+ (88.2 +/- 2.5%, mean +/- SEM) than on BM CD34+ (75.3 +/- 4.3%). Following cytokine administration, LFA-1 was expressed on only 59.7 +/- 3.7% of LP CD34+ at a low fluorescence intensity, suggesting that down-regulation of LFA-1 may facilitate the egress of cells from the bone marrow and prolong their circulation. In contrast, ICAM-1 was weakly positive on CD34+ cells from all sources. CD44 was expressed on the vast majority of CD34+ cells (> 95%) in all samples studied. The highest proportion of CD34+ cells costaining for c-kit was found in normal bone marrow (32.2 +/- 3.3%). In normal peripheral blood and after cytokine mobilization, fewer of the CD34+ cells weakly expressed c-kit (< 15%). The low percentage and level of c-kit expression may indicate that the majority of cytokine-mobilized CD34+ cells are lineage-committed progenitor cells, as reflected by the coexpression pattern for CD38, HLA-DR, and CD33.
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PMID:Expression of adhesion molecules and c-kit on CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells: comparison of cytokine-mobilized blood stem cells with normal bone marrow and peripheral blood. 752 8

In this study we investigated the proliferation of three well-documented MM lines and 10 bone marrow samples from myeloma patients in response to rh-SCF alone and combined with Interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-3 and IL-3/GM-CSF fusion protein PIXY 321. Neoplastic plasma cells were highly purified (> 90%) by immunomagnetic depletion of T, myeloid, monocytoid and NK cells. The number of S-phase cells was evaluated after 3 and 7 d of liquid culture by the bromodeoxyuridine (BRDU) incorporation assay. The proliferation of RPMI 8226 and U266 cell lines was also assessed by a clonogenic assay. All the experiments were performed in serum-free conditions. RPMI 8226 cell line was not stimulated by SCF which also did not augment the proliferative activity of IL-6, IL-3 and PIXY-321. Conversely, SCF addition resulted in 2.4-fold increase of the number of U266 colonies and in a higher number of U266 and MT3 cells in S-phase (24.5 +/- 2% SEM v 14.5 +/- 1% SEM and 32 +/- 3% SEM v 21 +/- 4% SEM, respectively; P < 0.05). The c-kit ligand also enhanced the proliferation of MT3 and U266 cells mediated by the other cytokines. Anti-SCF polyclonal antibodies completely abrogated the proliferative response of MT3 cells to exogenous SCF and markedly reduced the spontaneous growth of the same cell line. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction amplification (RT-PCR) did detect SCF mRNA in MT3 and RPMI 8226 cells. Moreover, secreted SCF was found, in a biologically active form, in the supernatant of the two cell lines by the MO7e proliferation assay. When tested on fresh myeloma samples, SCF increased the number of S-phase plasma cells (4.7 +/- 1.6% v 3.4 +/- 1.3% in control cultures: P = 0.02). Significant proliferation was also induced by IL-6 (7 +/- 2.3% of BRDU+ cells; P = 0.006), IL-3 (5.3 +/- 1.3%; P = 0.01) and PIXY-321 (5.4 +/- 1.6%; P = 0.02). The addition of SCF significantly enhanced the proliferation of myeloma cells responsive to IL-6. In summary, our results indicate that SCF is expressed in MM cells and stimulates the proliferation of neoplastic plasma cells.
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PMID:Expression and functional role of c-kit ligand (SCF) in human multiple myeloma cells. 752 40

Bryostatins, macrocyclic lactones from the marine bryozoan Bugula neritina, are potent antineoplastic agents and multi-potential stimulators of immune cells. We have examined the effects of bryostatins on mediator release from human basophilic leukocytes and human tissue mast cells. Bryostatins 1, 2, and 5 (10 to 3,000 nmol/L) induced histamine secretion from purified and unpurified peripheral blood basophils, whereas they caused no release of peptide-leukotriene C4 from these cells. The rate of histamine release caused by bryostatin 1 was slower than that caused by anti-IgE (t1/2 +/- SEM = 38.2 +/- 4.7 minutes v 8.9 +/- 0.2 minutes; P < .01), whereas the temperature dependence was similar (optimum release at 37 degrees C, approximately 30% less at 30 degrees C, and no release at 22 degrees C or 4 degrees C). The addition of increasing concentrations of extracellular Ca2+ to the medium caused histamine release in the presence of bryostatins. Subeffective concentrations of bryostatins and anti-IgE produced a synergistic effect on histamine release from basophils. Staurosporine, chelerythrine, and calphostin C (0.1 to 10 nmol/L), which are protein kinase C inhibitors, inhibited the histamine secretion activated by bryostatin 1 and tetradecanoylphorbol-acetate (TPA). Preincubation with granulocyte-monocyte colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF; 1 and 5 nmol/L) and interleukin-3 (IL-3; 10 ng/mL) potentiated the activation of human basophils induced by bryostatin 1. Neither bryostatin 1 nor bryostatin 2 induced the release of histamine from mast cells isolated from human lung or skin tissues. However, brief (10 minutes) preincubation with bryostatin 1 (3 to 300 nmol/L) potently inhibited the histamine secretion induced by anti-IgE from skin or lung mast cells. Bryostatin 1 was a more potent (by approximately 30 times) inhibitor of IgE-mediated histamine release than was TPA. The heterogeneous effects exerted by bryostatins on human basophils and mast cells can be of interest for those designing therapeutic trials using these agents.
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PMID:The antineoplastic bryostatins affect human basophils and mast cells differently. 753 37


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