Publication | Open Access
Human recombinant interleukin 1 stimulates collagenase and prostaglandin E2 production by human synovial cells.
629
Citations
10
References
1986
Year
ImmunologyStimulates CollagenaseImmunotherapyInflammationRheumatoid DisorderHuman Il-1Inflammatory Rheumatic DiseaseMatrix BiologyImmunopathologyHuman Synovial CellsCell SignalingRheumatoid ArthritisRheumatologyAutoimmune DiseaseAllergyChronic InflammationAutoimmunityProminent Pi 7Inflammatory DiseaseCell BiologyCytokineProstaglandin E2 ProductionMedicineExtracellular Matrix
The pathogenesis and progression of rheumatoid arthritis involves the production of biologically active lymphokines and monokines. Of these, interleukin 1 (IL-1) has been somewhat of a controversial molecule because it seems to evoke various biological responses in several different tissues. In these studies we demonstrate that three biological properties of human monocyte-derived IL-1 (T-lymphocyte activation and human synovial cell prostaglandin E2 and collagenase production) co-purify. The complementary DNA for the prominent pI 7 form of human IL-1 was expressed, purified, and tested. Any controversy now appears resolved since homogeneous recombinant human IL-1 stimulates prostaglandin E2 and collagenase from human synovial cells as well as activates T cells in vitro.
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