Publication | Closed Access
Release of interleukin‐1 from human synovial tissue in vitro
124
Citations
37
References
1985
Year
During the enzymatic disaggregation of human synovium, used in the process of isolating synoviocytes, a factor was liberated into the culture medium that exhibited the thymocyte mitogenic properties of interleukin-1. Like interleukin-1, this synovial-derived mitogen could be isolated using an affinity column of antihuman leukocytic pyrogen. By gel filtration and isoelectric focusing, the mitogen cofractionated with human monocyte-derived interleukin-1. Finally, the isolated mitogen was shown to exhibit other properties of interleukin-1: stimulation of the secretion of interleukin-2, enhancement of the titer of acute-phase proteins in vivo, and stimulation of the release of prostaglandin E2 from human synoviocyte cultures. These observations suggest that interleukin-1 can be derived from the human synovium.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1