| Literature DB >> 16565439 |
Fumikazu Nimura1, Li Feng Zhang, Kazu Okuma, Reiko Tanaka, Hajime Sunakawa, Naoki Yamamoto, Yuetsu Tanaka.
Abstract
Monocytes express on the cell surface several kinds of chemokine receptors that facilitate chemotaxis followed by differentiation in target tissues. In the present study, we found that a large number of monocytes from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) tightly adhered to plastic cell culture plates precoated with a monoclonal antibody (mAb, clone T312) specific for human CCR5 but not an isotype control after overnight incubation. Soluble T312 did not induce such adhesion, indicating that cross-linking of CCR5 is required for the enhanced adhesion of monocytes. The adhesion was blocked by a PI3-K inhibitor and an anti-CD18 blocking mAb. Following the cross-linking of CCR5, monocytes synthesized high levels of M-CSF, RANTES, MIP-1 alpha, and MIP-1 beta associated with a readily detectable down modulation of CD14, CD4, CCR5, and CXCR4 expression. The T312-enriched monocytes differentiated into dendritic cells (DCs) in the presence of interleukin-4 alone. After maturation with beta-interferon, the T312-induced DCs stimulated proliferation of allogeneic naïve CD4(+) T cells accompanied by the synthesis of high levels of gamma-interferon in vitro. Furthermore, the T312-induced DCs were capable of stimulating antigen-specific human T- and B-cell immune responses in our hu-PBL-SCID mouse system. Finally, screening of other anti-chemokine receptor mAbs showed that select clones of mAbs against CXCR4 and CCR3 were also capable of facilitating enrichment of monocytes similar to T312. These results show that cross-linking of chemokine receptors on monocytes by appropriate mAbs leads to activation and differentiation of monocytes and that the method described herein provides an alternate simple strategy for adherence-based isolation of monocytes and generation of functional DCs.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16565439 DOI: 10.1177/153537020623100409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Biol Med (Maywood) ISSN: 1535-3699