Caulfield J J, Hawrylowicz C M, Kemeny D M, Lee T H
Department of Allergy & Respiratory Medicine, Guy's Hospital, London, UK.
Immunology. 1997 Sep;92(1):123-30. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2567.1997.00320.x.
Previous studies have demonstrated an infiltration of monocytes and increased levels of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in the asthmatic lung. To study the possible effects of this cytokine upon the differentiation and function of these newly recruited monocytes, we have developed a model in which monocytes isolated from human peripheral blood were differentiated into macrophages in serum in the presence or absence of GM-CSF. After 7 days, the macrophages increased in size and granularity, had increased phagocytic activity, and expressed various adhesion molecules, CD14 and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II. The effects of GM-CSF on antigen presentation by cultured macrophages on the antigen-specific proliferative response of CD4+ T cells to Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus or purified protein derivative of tuberculin and the mitogen phytohaemagglutinin was determined. CD4+ T-cell proliferation was reduced when either antigen was presented by macrophages cultured in serum alone, compared with the values obtained with freshly isolated monocytes. However, CD4+ cell proliferation was comparable to that observed with monocytes when antigen was presented by macrophages which had been pre-cultured with 50 U/ml GM-CSF. CD4+ T-cell proliferation to phytohaemagglutinin was similar when all three populations were used as accessory cells. High numbers of macrophages partially suppressed CD4+ T-cell proliferation in response to antigen presented by monocytes, but there was no significant difference between macrophages cultured in the presence or absence of GM-CSF. This data suggests that GM-CSF directs monocyte differentiation into macrophages with an antigen-presenting, rather than a suppressive, phenotype. Elevated levels of GM-CSF in the asthmatic lung may therefore maintain recently recruited monocytes in an inflammatory and T-cell activating state.
以往的研究表明,哮喘患者的肺部存在单核细胞浸润以及粒细胞巨噬细胞集落刺激因子(GM-CSF)水平升高的现象。为了研究这种细胞因子对这些新招募的单核细胞的分化和功能可能产生的影响,我们建立了一个模型,在该模型中,从人外周血中分离出的单核细胞在有或没有GM-CSF的情况下于血清中分化为巨噬细胞。7天后,巨噬细胞的大小和颗粒度增加,吞噬活性增强,并表达了各种黏附分子、CD14和主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)II类分子。我们测定了GM-CSF对培养的巨噬细胞呈递抗原的作用,以及其对CD4+ T细胞对尘螨或结核菌素纯蛋白衍生物的抗原特异性增殖反应和对丝裂原植物血凝素的影响。与用新鲜分离的单核细胞获得的值相比,当单独在血清中培养的巨噬细胞呈递任何一种抗原时,CD4+ T细胞增殖均降低。然而,当抗原由用50 U/ml GM-CSF预培养的巨噬细胞呈递时,CD4+细胞增殖与单核细胞的情况相当。当将所有这三种细胞群体用作辅助细胞时,CD4+ T细胞对植物血凝素的增殖反应相似。大量巨噬细胞部分抑制了CD4+ T细胞对单核细胞呈递抗原的增殖反应,但在有或没有GM-CSF的情况下培养的巨噬细胞之间没有显著差异。这些数据表明,GM-CSF将单核细胞定向分化为具有抗原呈递而非抑制表型的巨噬细胞。因此,哮喘患者肺部GM-CSF水平升高可能会使新招募的单核细胞维持在炎症和T细胞激活状态。