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Glucocorticoids inhibit granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor-1 and interleukin-5 enhanced in vitro survival of human eosinophils.

61

Citations

21

References

1992

Year

Abstract

The effects of three corticosteroids, hydrocortisone, dexamethasone and methylprednisolone, on eosinophil survival enhanced by recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhGM-CSF) and recombinant murine interleukin-5 (rmIL-5) have been studied. Eosinophils were incubated at a concentration of 5 x 10(5) cells/ml in the presence of different concentrations of the three steroids with either rhGM-CSF (1 ng/ml) or rmIL-5 (50 U/ml). The eosinophils were cultured in the presence of the same concentrations of rhGM-CSF and rmIL-5 alone as a positive control and medium alone as a negative control. Viability was assessed after 7 days by trypan blue exclusion. All three steroids inhibited rhGM-CSF-enhanced eosinophil survival in a dose-dependent manner; the dose of these drugs producing 50% inhibition (IC50) was greater than 1.0 x 10(-4) M, 6.5 x 10(-6) M and 1.8 x 10(-6) M for hydrocortisone, dexamethasone and methylprednisolone, respectively. When eosinophils were cultured with the same concentration of rhGM-CSF in the presence of two non-glucocorticoids, beta-oestradiol and testosterone, neither of these steroids inhibited eosinophil survival over the concentration range 1 x 10(-10) M to 1 x 10(-4) M (n = 5). Dexamethasone and methylprednisolone, but not hydrocortisone, also inhibited eosinophil survival induced by rmIL-5 in a dose-dependent manner. These results suggest one mechanism for the efficacy of corticosteroids against eosinophil-related disorders.

References

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