Publication | Open Access
Biological and antigenic similarities of murine interferon-gamma and macrophage-activating factor.
120
Citations
46
References
1984
Year
Immune ActivationAntigenic SimilaritiesLaboratory ImmunologyMaf ActivityImmunologyImmune RegulationPathologyImmunologic MechanismImmunotherapeuticsInnate ImmunityImmune SystemImmunotherapyInflammationImmunopathologyMaf AssayAutoimmunityCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentCytokineMolecular ImmunologyMurine PecImmunomodulationMedicine
Murine peritoneal exudate cells (PEC) treated with murine recombinant interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) (greater than 99% estimated purity), or concanavalin A-stimulated spleen cell supernatants developed tumoricidal properties (macrophage activation factor [MAF] activity). MAF activity was found to occur with treatments of 10 U/ml IFN-gamma, and at levels as low as 1 U/ml IFN-gamma if a second signal (5 ng/ml endotoxin) was present in the MAF assay. Endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide [LPS]) alone at these levels failed to induce MAF; induction of MAF was observed at 1,000-fold greater levels. The ability of IFN-gamma to stimulate murine PEC was species specific. Various sources of materials that displayed MAF activity, including supernatants from interleukin 2-dependent cloned cytotoxic murine T lymphocyte lines that did not display detectable antiviral activity, were neutralized by antibody raised and affinity purified against recombinant IFN-gamma. Thus, IFN-gamma, although never detectable by antiviral assays, appears to be present in many lymphokine preparations and has potent macrophage activation capability.
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