Literature DB >> 2495033

Interleukin-4 induces a substance in bone marrow stromal cells that reversibly inhibits factor-dependent and factor-independent cell proliferation.

C Peschel1, I Green, W E Paul.   

Abstract

Bone marrow-derived stromal cell monolayers pretreated with recombinant interleukin-4 (IL-4) inhibit the growth of hematopoietic cells. This was demonstrated by inhibition of fresh bone marrow-derived, IL-3-induced soft agar colonies as well as by inhibition of proliferation of IL-3-dependent cell lines and of a Friend virus-transformed erythroleukemic cell line. Pretreatment of stromal cells with IL-4 for five to seven days induced the inhibitory activity. IL-4 could then be removed before "plating" the bone marrow cells in soft agar, indicating that the inhibitory activity did not depend on the action of IL-4 on the precursors of the soft agar colonies. The inhibitory activity appears to be mediated by a soluble factor since inhibition was achieved even if the stromal cell layer was separated from the colony forming cells by an "empty" agar layer. However, supernatants of IL-4-induced stromal cell layers had no detectable inhibitory activity. The inhibitory action of the IL-4-pretreated stromal cell lines was not the result of killing of the precursor cells since it could be reversed if the agar layer containing the colony-forming cells was removed from the stromal cell layer and cultured with IL-3. Hydrocortisone (HC) blocked the inhibitory effect if added either in the IL-4 preincubation phase or during the colony formation stage, implying that HC blocked both induction of the inhibitory activity and its release or its effector function. A homogenous long-term stromal cell line could not be induced to exert the inhibitory activity; partial inhibition could be achieved with pure macrophages stimulated with IL-4 and CSF-1, suggesting that the inhibitory activity induced by IL-4 in mixed stromal cell layers may depend on a complex mechanism involving more than one cell type. Northern analysis of RNA from IL-4-induced and uninduced stromal cells indicated that IL-4 did not upregulate expression of CSF-1 or transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) and only modestly increased expression of tumor necrosis factor, suggesting that these cytokines were not responsible for the inhibitory activity. The capacity of IL-4 to induce inhibitory activity in stromal cell layers suggests that IL-4 may play a role in the regulation of hematopoiesis.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2495033

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood        ISSN: 0006-4971            Impact factor:   22.113


  5 in total

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Authors:  J H Jansen; W E Fibbe; R Willemze; J C Kluin-Nelemans
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2.  Cytokine production by a megakaryocytic cell line.

Authors:  B Sandrock; K M Hudson; D E Williams; M A Lieberman
Journal:  In Vitro Cell Dev Biol Anim       Date:  1996-04       Impact factor: 2.416

3.  Inhibition by interleukin-4 of constitutive beta interferon synthesis in mouse macrophages.

Authors:  P Nickolaus; R Zawatzky
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  1994-10       Impact factor: 5.103

4.  Interleukin 4 regulates induction of sialoadhesin, the macrophage sialic acid-specific receptor.

Authors:  A S McWilliam; P Tree; S Gordon
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1992-11-01       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Hypoplastic acute leukemia: description of eight cases and search for hematopoietic inhibiting activity.

Authors:  R de Bock; M de Jonge; M Korthout; E Wouters; D van Bockstaele; M van der Planken; M Peetermans
Journal:  Ann Hematol       Date:  1992-12       Impact factor: 3.673

  5 in total

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