CYTOKINE SECRETION BY MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS MONOCYTES - RELATIONSHIP TO DISEASE-ACTIVITY

被引:73
作者
RUDICK, RA
RANSOHOFF, RM
机构
[1] CLEVELAND CLIN EDUC FDN,DEPT MOLEC BIOL,CLEVELAND,OH 44106
[2] CLEVELAND CLIN EDUC FDN,DEPT GEN MED SCI,CLEVELAND,OH 44106
关键词
D O I
10.1001/archneur.1992.00530270079022
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Autoantigen recognition by specific T cells may initiate a tissue-specific immune response in multiple sclerosis (MS), which is a chronic inflammatory demyelinating disorder. During subsequent nonspecific immune amplification, interleukin 10 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha are released by cells of the monocyte/macrophage lineage, with the potential to influence profoundly immune regulation systemically or within the central nervous system. Regulation of monocyte inflammatory gene expression may be relevant to the pathogenesis of MS. We investigated spontaneous secretion of interleukin 1-beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and prostaglandin E2 with the use of monocytes that we isolated from patients with active (n = 9) and stable (n = 9) MS and from age-matched normal controls (n = 9). The patient groups with MS were matched for age, duration of MS, and disease severity. Patients with active disease were within weeks of the onset of a clinical exacerbation. Monocytes were isolated by density gradient centrifugation, followed by adherence to plastic tissue culture flasks, resulting in a highly purified adherent monocyte preparation. Monocytes from patients with active disease spontaneously secreted less tumor necrosis factor ot and less prostaglandin E2 compared with that in patients with stable MS, while interleukin 1-beta levels were below the level of assay sensitivity. Levels of interleukin 1-beta and tumor necrosis factor-alpha increased to similar levels in response to lipopolysaccharide (0.1 mg/L), indicating that altered cell viability could not account for the observed differences. In response to lipopolysaccharide, prostaglandin E2 levels increased more significantly in patients with stable than active MS, suggesting differential sensitivity to stimuli of arachidonic acid metabolism. The results documented functional differences between monocytes that were isolated from patients with active compared with stable MS and suggested that peripheral inflammatory monokine secretion parallels MS disease activity.
引用
收藏
页码:265 / 270
页数:6
相关论文
共 18 条
[1]   INCREASED PRODUCTION OF INTERFERON GAMMA AND TUMOR NECROSIS FACTOR PRECEDES CLINICAL MANIFESTATION IN MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS - DO CYTOKINES TRIGGER OFF EXACERBATIONS [J].
BECK, J ;
RONDOT, P ;
CATINOT, L ;
FALCOFF, E ;
KIRCHNER, H ;
WIETZERBIN, J .
ACTA NEUROLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, 1988, 78 (04) :318-323
[2]   INTERFERON-MEDIATED INHIBITION OF PROSTAGLANDIN SYNTHESIS IN HUMAN MONONUCLEAR LEUKOCYTES [J].
DOREDUFFY, P ;
PERRY, W ;
KUO, HH .
CELLULAR IMMUNOLOGY, 1983, 79 (02) :232-239
[3]   PROSTAGLANDIN RELEASE IN MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS - CORRELATION WITH DISEASE-ACTIVITY [J].
DOREDUFFY, P ;
DONALDSON, JO ;
KOFF, T ;
LONGO, M ;
PERRY, W .
NEUROLOGY, 1986, 36 (12) :1587-1590
[4]  
DOREDUFFY P, 1985, SPRINGER SEMIN IMMUN, V8, P305
[5]  
DOREDUFFY P, 1991, NEUROLOGY S1, V41, P189
[6]   MS - A CNS AND SYSTEMIC AUTOIMMUNE-DISEASE [J].
HAFLER, DA ;
WEINER, HL .
IMMUNOLOGY TODAY, 1989, 10 (03) :104-107
[7]  
HAMILTON TA, 1989, IMMUNOPHARMACOLOGY, P213
[8]   PERIVASCULAR MICROGLIAL CELLS OF THE CNS ARE BONE-MARROW DERIVED AND PRESENT ANTIGEN INVIVO [J].
HICKEY, WF ;
KIMURA, H .
SCIENCE, 1988, 239 (4837) :290-292
[9]  
JAMESON P, 1977, P SOC EXP BIOL MED, V155, P173
[10]   REGULATION OF NATURAL-KILLER CELL CYTO-TOXICITY BY PROSTAGLANDIN-E IN THE PERIPHERAL-BLOOD AND CEREBROSPINAL-FLUID OF PATIENTS WITH MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS AND OTHER NEUROLOGICAL DISEASES .1. ASSOCIATION BETWEEN AMOUNT OF PROSTAGLANDIN PRODUCED, NATURAL-KILLER, AND ENDOGENOUS INTERFERON [J].
MERRILL, JE ;
GERNER, RH ;
MYERS, LW ;
ELLISON, GW .
JOURNAL OF NEUROIMMUNOLOGY, 1983, 4 (03) :223-237