Publication | Closed Access
Induction of fibroblast proliferation by interleukin‐1 derived from human monocytic leukemia cells
124
Citations
29
References
1984
Year
Human interleukin-1 (IL-1), free of contaminating lymphokines, was isolated from cultures of purified monoblasts from a patient with acute monocytic leukemia. Partially purified IL-1 (diafiltration, ultrafiltration, and isoelectric focusing) stimulated proliferation of subconfluent human fibroblasts in vitro. Further purification of IL-1 by high-resolution gel filtration- and anion exchange-high performance liquid chromatography revealed that fibroblast proliferation activity could not be separated from IL-1 activity (thymocyte proliferation), suggesting that both activities are the properties of a single molecule. Fibroblasts and thymocytes exhibited a similar sensitivity to the proliferative effects of IL-1. These findings suggest that macrophages participating in inflammatory reactions in vivo might release IL-1, which could function to expand fibroblast populations at sites of inflammatory reactions, by acting as a fibroblast growth factor.
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