Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04141 (granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor)
6,790 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We previously demonstrated that, in C57B1/6 mice, cyclosporin A enhanced and dexamethasone inhibited the Aspergillus fumigatus-induced pulmonary eosinophilia and total IgE levels. To evaluate whether these effects were related to the modulation of T-lymphocyte recruitment and activation and cytokine expression, we performed immunohistochemical staining for T-cell surface marker CD3 and CD4, cell activation marker CD25, and cytokines granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), interleukin-4 (IL-4) and interleukin-5 (IL-5) on lung tissue sections from mice exposed to Aspergillus fumigatus and treated or not with dexamethasone or cyclosporin A. Dexamethasone significantly inhibited Aspergillus fumigatus-induced increased number of activated T cells and cytokine-expressing cells in parallel with a decrease in pulmonary eosinophils. In contrast, cyclosporin A did not decrease these immunological events but enhanced the lung eosinophil recruitment. Moreover, dexamethasone prevented the production of immunoglobulins against 76 and 36 kD antigen proteins and cyclosporin A against 76 and 18 kD antigen proteins. These results indicate that dexamethasone down-regulates and cyclosporin A up-regulates lung eosinophil recruitment and total IgE production, probably via the modulation of T-lymphocyte activation and GM-CSF, IL-4 and IL-5 expression. Both drugs inhibit Aspergillus fumigatus-specific antibody synthesis, but their suppressive actions are selective to different antigenic components.
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PMID:Dexamethasone and cyclosporin A modulation of cytokine expression and specific antibody synthesis in an allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis murine model. 895 99

In a prospective study of 80 patients, we investigated the association of acute kidney graft rejection with pretransplant T helper/suppressor activity, B-cell responses, and in vitro cytokine secretion. Patients' CD4+ or CD8+ T cells were cocultured with control B cells and pokeweed mitogen for 6 days. SAC I was used for T cell- and monocyte-independent B-cell stimulation and pokeweed mitogen was used for T cell-dependent B-cell stimulation. B-cell differentiation was assessed in a reverse hemolytic plaque assay. Cytokine responses of T cells (interleukin [IL]-2, IL-10, gamma-interferon) and B cells/monocytes (IL-6, IL-8, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor) were determined in culture supernatants using ELISA. Subsets of CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells, and B cells were assessed by flow cytometry. None of 12 patients with pretransplant CD4 helper defects (CD4 helper activity < 10%) had acute rejection episodes, in contrast to 32 of 68 (47%) patients with normal pretransplant CD4 helper function (P = 0.001). Patients with pretransplant CD4 helper defects also had better 1-year graft function than patients without CD4 helper defects (serum creatinine 1.2 +/- 0.1 mg/dl and 1.7 +/- 0.1 mg/dl, respectively, P < 0.05). Pretransplant IL-10 responses were significantly associated with the occurrence of acute rejection episodes (P = 0.001) and impaired 1-year graft function (P < 0.001). All 14 patients with low pretransplant IL-10 responses (< 100 pg/ml) had 1-year serum creatinine values of < 1.5 mg/dl. Pretransplant B-cell defects and B cell/monocyte-derived cytokine secretion were not related to the incidence of graft rejection or infectious complications. Pretransplant CD8 suppressor-effector (CD11b+), cell counts were significantly associated with the occurrence of infections (P < 0.05). These results show that pretransplant CD4 helper defects and low IL-10 responses predict a low risk of graft rejection, whereas Th1 (IL-2, gamma-interferon) and B-cell/monocyte responses are not of predictive value.
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PMID:Pretransplant CD4 helper function and interleukin 10 response predict risk of acute kidney graft rejection. 897 Jun 16

Activation of human blood neutrophils and monocytes for enhanced release of toxic oxygen radicals may take place after priming with several cytokines including hematopoietic growth factors. The potential impact of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) on this response and the relative potency of various cytokines remains unclear. Blood neutrophils and monocytes were isolated from 25 HIV outpatients with variable immunodeficiency. Oxidative burst response upon stimulation with N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine was assessed in neutrophils after priming with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and interferon-gamma (IFN-g), and in monocytes after priming with GM-CSF and IFN-g. Monocyte oxidative burst responses were not changed in patients or controls. In contrast, following priming with IFN-g, GM-CSF or medium (but not G-CSF) the neutrophils in HIV patients with CD4 counts > 200 x 10(9)/L exhibited a significantly higher chemiluminescence response than was seen in healthy age-matched controls, whereas the response in patients with lower CD4 counts was not different from controls. At comparable concentrations, GM-CSF induced a significantly higher priming than G-CSF and IFN-g. A significant positive correlation between CD4 counts and priming activity of GM-CSF and IFN-g on neutrophils was observed. We conclude that neutrophils in HIV infection have a normal or enhanced response to the oxidative metabolism priming activity of hematopoietic growth factors in vitro, whereas priming effect on monocytes was not seen.
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PMID:Priming of neutrophil and monocyte activation in human immunodeficiency virus infection. Comparison of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and interferon-gamma. 897 88

Thymocytes show differential cytokine responses, depending on the stage of differentiation. Whether these responses are due to preferential cytokine receptor expression or due to downstream signaling mechanisms is unknown. In this study, we examined the relationship between receptor expression and T-cell proliferation or differentiation using thymocytes from transgenic mice constitutively expressing the human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (hGM-CSF) receptor. Transgenic CD4- CD8-, CD4+ CD8-, and CD4- CD8+ cells proliferated when cultured with hGM-CSF in vitro, whereas CD4+ CD8+ cells failed to proliferate. To examine the effect of hGM-CSF receptor signaling on T-cell development, we used fetal thymic organ cultures. The addition of exogenous hGM-CSF resulted in the failure of CD4- CD8- cells to differentiate into CD4+ CD8+ cells. To more closely identify this maturational inhibition, we reconstituted normal fetal lobes with sorted pro-T-, pre-T-, or post-pre-T-precursor cells from transgenic mice. The addition of hGM-CSF to these cultures led to a block in both pro-T- and pre-T-cell differentiation, whereas the more mature post-pre-T cells differentiated normally. We propose that hGM-CSF receptor signaling during T-cell development results in a stage-specific inhibition of thymic precursor maturation.
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PMID:Human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (hGM-CSF) induces inhibition of intrathymic T-cell development in hGM-CSF receptor transgenic mice. 902 58

Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, mobilized peripheral blood stem cell (PSC) products, and peripheral blood leukocytes posttransplantation contain cells that cause allogeneic and autologous T cell apoptosis. Isolation and characterization of these cells demonstrated that they were low-density (Percoll fractionation) CD14+ monocytes. T cells in PSC products have a depressed phytohemagglutinin (PHA) mitogenic response; however, purified CD4+ or CD8+ T cells exhibit a statistically normal mitogenic function. Furthermore, no T cell inhibitory activity was observed in CD14+, CD4+, and CD8+ cell-depleted fractions enriched in CD4- CD8- TCR alpha/beta+ T cells. Inhibition of T cell function by CD14+ monocytes required cell-cell contact, and the analyses of DNA fragmentation by Southern and TUNEL analysis demonstrates an activation-induced T cell apoptosis in the presence of CD14+ monocytes. Reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction studies suggested that high levels of interleukin-10 or tumor necrosis factor gene transcripts in the PSC products may contribute to the inhibition of T cell function.
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PMID:Monocytes from mobilized stem cells inhibit T cell function. 912 7

A murine model of pneumonia due to the mouse pneumonitis agent (MoPn [murine Chlamydia trachomatis]) in mice deficient in CD4+ T-cell function (major histocompatibility complex [MHC] class II function [class II-/-], CD8+ T-cell function (beta2-microglobulin deficient, MHC class I deficient [Beta2m-/-]), B-cell function (C57BL/10J-Igh(tm1Cgn) [Igh-/-]), and gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) (C57BL/6-Ifg(tm1) [Ifg-/-]) or interleukin-4 (C57BL/6J(tm1Cgn29) [IL4-/-]) production was employed to determine if each of these mechanisms was critical to resistance against reinfection by C. trachomatis or if alternate compensatory mechanisms existed in their absence which could potentially be exploited in vaccine development. Resistance to reinfection with MoPn was heavily dependent on CD4+ T cells. CD4 T-cell-deficient MHC class II-/- mice were very susceptible to reinfection with MoPn, showing the critical importance of this cell to resistance. These mice lacked antibody production but did produce IFN-gamma, apparently by mechanisms involving NK and CD8+ T cells. Neutralization of IFN-gamma in these mice led to a borderline increase in susceptibility, showing a possible role (albeit small) of this cytokine in this setting. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) was also present at increased levels in these mice. Igh-/- B-cell-deficient mice which produce no antibody to MoPn were only modestly more susceptible to reinfection than immunized B-cell-intact controls, showing that antibody, including lung immunoglobulin A, is not an absolute requirement for relatively successful host defense in this setting. Levels of lung IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha were elevated in Igh-/- mice compared to those in controls. IL-4-/- mice (deficient in Th2 function) could develop normal resistance to reinfection with MoPn. Conversely, normal mice rendered partially IFN-gamma deficient by antibody depletion were somewhat impaired in their ability to develop acquired immunity to MoPn, again indicating a role for this cytokine in host defense against rechallenge. Of most importance, however, congenitally IFN-gamma-deficient Ifg-/- mice (which have elevated levels of other cytokines, including TNF-alpha and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor) are paradoxically more resistant to MoPn rechallenge than controls, showing that IFN-gamma is not an absolute requirement for acquired resistance and implying the presence of very effective compensatory host defense mechanism(s). In vivo depletion of TNF-alpha significantly increased MoPn levels in the lungs in these mice. Thus, resistance to reinfection in this model is flexible and multifactorial and is heavily dependent on CD4+ T cells, with a probable role for IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha and a possible modest role for Th1-dependent antibody. Since IFN-gamma was dispensable in host defense, the highly effective mechanism or mechanisms which can compensate for its absence (which include TNF-alpha) deserve further study.
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PMID:Humoral and cellular immunity in secondary infection due to murine Chlamydia trachomatis. 919 62

The aim of the present study was to investigate the patterns of cytokine production by T cell clones raised from in vivo activated synovial fluid (SF) mononuclear cells (MNC) of five patients with oligoarticular juvenile arthritis (JA). Freshly isolated SF T cells were cultured in vitro with low dose recombinant IL-2 and subsequently cloned by limiting dilution. Sixty-four clones were obtained from the five patients studied. Fifty-nine clones were TCR alpha/beta+, either CD4+ (n = 43) or CD8+ (n = 15). The remaining five clones were TCR gamma/delta+, CD4-, CD8-. Clone immunophenotypes differed in the individual patients. Forty-four T cell clones were stimulated with phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) and supernatants tested for the presence of IL-2, IL-4, IL-5 and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) by ELISA or bioassays. Cytokine mRNA accumulation was tested by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Most of 44 clones tested released large amounts of IFN-gamma irrespective of the immunophenotype. Of these, 27 were classified as Th1-type and 17 as Th0-type based upon the IFN-gamma/IL-4 ratio in culture supernatants. Finally, when 10 representative T cell clones were tested for pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines, gene expression by RT-PCR, all of them were found to express the granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), IL-10 and transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta1) genes, and half of them IL-6 and IL-8 mRNA. In conclusion, T cell clones, that represent the progeny of in vivo activated SF T cells from oligoarticular JA patients, display heterogeneous immunophenotypes, but all share the ability to produce large amounts of IFN-gamma, with a predominant Th1/Th0 pattern. The expression of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokine genes in these clones suggests that in vivo activated SF T cells modulate joint inflammation in a complex fashion.
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PMID:Synovial fluid T cell clones from oligoarticular juvenile arthritis patients display a prevalent Th1/Th0-type pattern of cytokine secretion irrespective of immunophenotype. 921 17

CD11a, the alpha chain of LFA-1, which is a member of the LeuCAM family of integrins, has been implicated in the formation of HIV-induced syncytia and may contribute to the depletion of CD4-positive lymphocytes seen in patients with HIV infection. In this study, we examined the effects of HIV-1 infection on the expression of CD11a on cultured monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs). Monocytes isolated from peripheral blood and maintained in suspension culture were infected in vitro with a monocytotropic variant of HIV-1 (Ba-L). Surface expression of CD11a, measured by indirect immunofluorescence and flow cytometry, was significantly higher on HIV-infected cells than on mock-infected cells from the same donor. Upregulation of CD11a expression was unaffected by the HIV reverse transcriptase inhibitor, zidovudine, indicating that it did not depend on reverse transcription. A step before reverse transcription, such as viral binding, appears sufficient to trigger an increase in CD11a expression. This hypothesis is supported by our findings of soluble recombinant CD4 inhibition of HIV-induced CD11a upregulation. It is possible that induction of a cytokine network by HIV underlies this effect, given our findings that exposure of uninfected MDMs to granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) specifically increased CD11a expression and that HIV-infected MDMs secreted more GM-CSF than mock-infected cells.
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PMID:Effects of HIV-1 on the surface expression of LFA-1 on cultured monocytes. 924 Nov 7

We have transfected human melanoma cell line 518A2 with the cDNA encoding interleukin-2 (IL-2) or granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), and compared cytokine-producing clones for their ability to induce melanoma-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) from autologous peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) in vitro. The parental cell line expressed HLA-A1, HLA-A2, ICAM-1, LFA-3, in addition to the common CTL antigens MAGE-1, MAGE-3, tyrosinase, gp100, and Melan-A/MART-1. Stimulation of autologous PBMC responders with the IL-2-transfected clone 518/IL2.14 specifically induced CTL lines reactive with all cell lines derived from the autologous patient. Strikingly, GM-CSF-transfected 518A2 cells did not induce anti-tumor CTL reactivity. CTL induction against 518/IL2.14 was independent of HLA class II expression or CD4 help. The parental cell line 518A2 gained immunogenic properties when high concentrations of IL-2 were supplied exogenously, indicating that IL-2 produced and present at high levels locally by itself enhanced immunogenicity. From the autologous CTL line reactive with 518/IL2.14, clones were generated against an as yet unknown antigen, which was present in all autologous melanoma cell lines as well as in 7 of 15 HLA-A2+ melanoma cell lines tested, but not in melanocytes. These results will be discussed with respect to the possibility of using IL-2-transfected melanoma cells as a vaccine for treatment of patients with melanoma.
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PMID:Transfection of IL-2 augments CTL response to human melanoma cells in vitro: immunological characterization of a melanoma vaccine. 933 41

The present study investigated the ability of supernatants collected from cultures of healthy donor-derived peripheral blood mononuclear cells (HD-PBMCs) stimulated with anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody (MAb) (allogeneic CD3 supernatants; ACD3S) to induce, upon brief exposure, tumour-reactive cytotoxic lymphocytes in cancer patients' PBMCs. ACD3S enhanced natural killer (NK) and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cell-mediated cytotoxicity. ACD3S contained increased levels of interleukins (IL) 1, 2, 6, 7 and 12, as well as of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), gamma-interferon (IFN-gamma) and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha). MAbs against these cytokines significantly reduced the ACD3S-induced cytotoxicity. ACD3S-induced cytotoxicity was not inhibited by anti-CD4, CD8 and MHC class I MAbs, but was markedly reduced in the presence of MAb against CD18. In contrast to HD-PBMC, ACD3S derived from cancer patients' lymphocytes exhibited lower levels of the above-mentioned cytokines and exerted reduced biological activity. In conclusion, ACD3S are able to activate, upon short-term incubation, tumour-reactive lymphocytes from cancer patients' PBMCs that lyse a variety of tumour targets, including autologous tumours. ACD3S contain high levels of certain cytokines that positively influence the induction of autologous tumour-reactive lymphocytes. Such supernatants can be collected easily from healthy donors and stored until use in clinical trials for adoptive cellular therapy of cancer. They may also be indicated in the construction of cytokine cocktails that have the ability to induce anti-tumour cytotoxicity.
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PMID:Induction of anti-tumour lymphocytes in cancer patients after brief exposure to supernatants from cultures of anti-CD3-stimulated allogeneic lymphocytes. 937 69


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