Publication | Open Access
Drug-induced agranulocytosis: in vitro evidence for immune suppression of granulopoiesis and a cross-reacting lymphocyte antibody
46
Citations
22
References
1979
Year
Two patients with agranulocytosis associated with diphenylhydantoin (DPH) therapy and clinical data suggesting suppression of granulopoiesis were investigated using in vitro culture techniques for committed granulocyte/macrophage precursors. Addition of DPH to cultures containing the patients' sera resulted in significant suppression of colony growth. Extensive studies on the acute serum from one patient revealed the drug-dependent inhibitory activity to be nondialyzable, resistant to chloroform extraction, heat stable, active in the presence of heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum, active against autologous as well as allogeneic cells, and absent from convalescent sera. Drug-dependent bone marrow colony-suppressing activity was removed by absorption on an antiimmunoglobulin-Sepharose column but not by IgG-Sepharose. The serum show non-drug dependent suppression of oxygen consumption by normal polymorphonuclear leukocytes engaged in phagocytosis and also showed evidence of ability to opsonize these cells. When the serum was incubated with mitogen-stimulated lymphocytes, suppression of 3H-thymidine uptake by autologous but not allogeneic cells was noted. Similarly, the serum suppressed short-term 3H-thymidine uptake by autologous but not allogeneic bone marrow. Absorption of the patients' sera with allogeneic polymorphonuclear leukocytes, autologous polymorphonuclear leukocytes, or autologous lymphocytes removed the drug-dependent inhibitory activity, but absorption with allogeneic lymphocytes did not. These data are most consistent with the presence of a noncomplement dependent antibody capable of suppressing granulopoiesis, mediating peripheral destruction of polymorphonuclear leukocytes, and cross-reacting with a lymphocyte antigen of limited population distribution.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1