IMMUNOTOXICITY OF INVITRO VANADIUM EXPOSURES - EFFECTS ON INTERLEUKIN-1, TUMOR-NECROSIS-FACTOR-ALPHA, AND PROSTAGLANDIN-E2 PRODUCTION BY WEHI-3 MACROPHAGES

被引:21
作者
COHEN, MD
PARSONS, E
SCHLESINGER, RB
ZELIKOFF, JT
机构
[1] Department of Environmental Medicine, New York University Medical Center, Tuxedo
来源
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF IMMUNOPHARMACOLOGY | 1993年 / 15卷 / 03期
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0192-0561(93)90056-5
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Treatment of cultured mouse macrophages with either of two different vanadium compounds was shown to affect the production/release of two major immunoregulatory cytokines. The pentavalent vanadium compound ammonium metavanadate was shown previously to disrupt cell-mediated immunity at the earliest stages of an in vivo anti-Listerial response, in that mice treated with vanadium displayed decreased accessory cell recruitment and numbers of activated macrophages at infection sites. To determine whether these effects were due to vanadium-induced alterations in the production of biologically-active mediators, mouse macrophage-like WEHI-3 cells were treated in vitro with ammonium metavanadate or vanadium pentoxide prior to stimulation with lipopolysaccharide endotoxin (LPS). After stimulation, monokine (tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-1) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) activities were assessed. Both vanadium compounds decreased recovered monokine activities; measured TNFalpha concentrations were also reduced. Spontaneous release of the IL-1/TNF-regulating prostanoid PGE2 was significantly increased by the highest concentration of vanadate tested, although LPS-stimulated PGE2 production was unaffected by either compound. These results indicate that, in vitro, pentavalent vanadium can interfere with immunoregulatory mediators critical for maintaining host immunocompetence.
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页码:437 / 446
页数:10
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