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Query: UNIPROT:P17931 (galectin-3)
2,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The study reported here was performed to find out whether changes in the number of mycobacteria in various organs of BCG-infected mice can be related to changes in the phenotype of monocytes, macrophages and lymphocytes in the blood, various tissues, and peritoneal cavity and to the formation of granulomas in the spleen, liver and lungs. The relative amounts of various antigens on the leukocytes were assessed semi-quantitatively after immunocytochemical detection of the binding of monoclonal antibodies. Granuloma formation was determined after immunocytochemical staining of cells in sections of liver and lung tissue with a monoclonal antibody against the common leukocyte antigen and in sections of the spleen with a monoclonal antibody against the Mac-2 antigen. The results showed that during the first week of infection the number of BCG in spleen, liver and lungs declined considerably. Multiplication of mycobacteria during the second week of infection was associated with decreased expression of antigen F4/80 and increased expression of Ia antigen and Mac-2 antigen by blood monocytes and macrophages. Reduction of the numbers of BCG in the spleen and liver during the third week after i.v. injection of BCG and in lungs during the fourth week of the infection was found to be correlated with the degree of granuloma formation in these organs. After intravenous injection of killed BCG no changes were observed in the phenotype of monocytes and the macrophages in spleen, liver, lungs and peritoneal cavity. These mice showed considerably less granuloma formation than BCG-infected mice. The present results indicate that live but not killed mycobacteria induce macrophage activation.
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PMID:Immunocytochemical analysis of cellular responses to BCG. 264 84

The antigenic phenotype of mouse lymph node follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) was studied by immunocytochemical techniques. Indirect fluorescence was used in conjunction with monoclonal antibodies to localize FDC surface antigens on FDC-enriched cell preparations and in cryostat sections. Lymph nodes from rats and mice were also labeled directly for Ia antigens with fluorescein- or peroxidase-conjugated Ia-specific monoclonal antibodies (i.e., MRC Ox4 and 10-2.16, respectively). Lymphoid tissue was also prepared for electron microscopy to allow clear distinction between Ia antigens of B lymphocytes and FDCs in situ. In these experiments, gold-labeled antigen was used to clearly identify FDCs and their processes among the Ia-positive cells of lymph node follicles. The labeling observed by light and electron microscopy showed that FDCs expressed Ia in situ and in vitro. Additional surface determinants shown to be expressed by FDCs included H2-K, common leukocyte antigen, and the receptor for the Fc portion of IgG1 and IgG2b. Neither macrophage antigens, such as Mac-1, Mac-2, Mac-3, and F4/80, nor the lymphocyte markers Ly-1, Ly-2, and Thy-1 were expressed by FDCs. Thus, the antigenic phenotype of FDCs, along with their distinctive dendritic morphology, their nonphagocytic and nonadherent nature, and their ability to trap and retain immune complexes on their plasma membrane, identifies them as a unique cell population.
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PMID:Antigenic phenotyping of isolated and in situ rodent follicular dendritic cells (FDC) with emphasis on the ultrastructural demonstration of Ia antigens. 352 78

The purpose of the present study was to compare the phenotype of tissue macrophages with that of their precursors in the bone marrow and blood. The phenotype was determined on the basis of the quantitative binding of monoclonal antibodies to cell-surface antigens (antigen F4/80, complement receptor III, Fc receptor II, Ia antigen, common leukocyte antigen, and Mac-2 and Mac-3 antigens) on individual mononuclear phagocytes. Monoclonal antibody binding to cells, detected by the biotin-avidin immunoperoxidase procedure, was quantitated by cytophotometric determination of the amount of enzyme reaction product on cells. The results of this quantitation are expressed as the median of the specific absorbance per unit of cell-surface area (0.25 micron2) and per cell. Shortly after collection of the mononuclear phagocytes, binding of all monoclonal antibodies except those directed against the common leukocyte and Mac-2 antigens to peritoneal macrophages was enhanced compared with binding to blood monocytes; for alveolar macrophages we found reduced binding of monoclonal antibodies F4/80 and M1/70 (complement receptor III) and enhanced binding of monoclonal antibodies with specificity for the common leukocyte antigen and Mac-2 and Mac-3 antigens. The results obtained with cultured mononuclear phagocytes show that during the development from monoblast to tissue macrophages, monoclonal antibody binding to the various types of mononuclear phagocyte, expressed per unit of cell-surface area, was not significantly altered except that of M3/38 (Mac-2 antigen) to peritoneal macrophages and that of F4/80 and M1/70 (complement receptor III) to alveolar macrophages. Expressed on a per cell basis, the results show an increase in the binding of all monoclonal antibodies except those directed against the Fc receptor II and Mac-3 antigen during the development from promonocytes to peritoneal macrophages; binding of most monoclonal antibodies to alveolar macrophages was considerably lower than that to blood monocytes. It is concluded that the expression of the various cell-surface antigens alters during mononuclear phagocyte differentiation. The expression changed also during culture, although distinct patterns of alteration could not be distinguished.
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PMID:Quantitative immunocytochemical characterization of mononuclear phagocytes. I. Monoblasts, promonocytes, monocytes, and peritoneal and alveolar macrophages. 356 40

Langerhans cells are Ia-bearing antigen-presenting cells in the epidermis that share many functions with macrophages. We have used monoclonal antibodies to the macrophage antigens, Mac-2 and-3, Ia antigen, Fc fragment receptor and the common leukocyte antigen CLA to compare the cell surface antigens of these cells with those of interdigitating and follicular dendritic cells and of macrophages in lymphoid tissues. Immunoperoxidase staining was carried out with epidermal sheets from BALB/c mice and epidermal cell suspensions enriched for Langerhans cells by Fc rosetting. Langerhans cells stained for all of these antigens. Comparison with the staining properties of other dendritic cells and macrophages, in combination with previous observations, indicates a close relationship of Langerhans cells to the interdigitating cells of lymphoid tissues.
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PMID:Staining of Langerhans cells with monoclonal antibodies to macrophages and lymphoid cells. 657 93