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Primary Hepatocytes from Mice Treated with IL-2/IL-12 Produce T Cell Chemoattractant Activity that Is Dependent on Monokine Induced by IFN-γ (Mig) and Chemokine Responsive to γ-2 (Crg-2)
Author(s) -
JongWook Park,
M. Eilene Gruys,
K McCormick,
JongKeuk Lee,
Jeffrey Subleski,
Jon M. Wigginton,
Robert G. Fenton,
Ji-Ming Wang,
Robert H. Wiltrout
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.166.6.3763
Subject(s) - monokine , chemokine , biology , in vitro , hepatocyte , microbiology and biotechnology , chemotaxis , interferon gamma , parenchyma , in vivo , cytokine , immunology , inflammation , receptor , biochemistry , botany
The IFN-gamma-inducible proteins monokine induced by IFN-gamma (Mig) and chemokine responsive to gamma-2 (Crg-2) can contribute to IL-12-induced antiangiogenic and leukocyte-recruiting activities, but the extent to which leukocytes vs parenchymal cells in different organs contribute to the production of these molecules remains unclear. The results presented herein show that IFN-gamma-dependent induction of Mig and Crg-2 gene expression can occur in many nonlymphoid organs, and these genes are rapidly induced in purified hepatocytes isolated from mice treated with IL-2 plus IL-12, or from Hepa 1-6 hepatoma cells treated in vitro with IFN-gamma. In addition to depending on IFN-gamma, the ability of IL-12 or IL-2/IL-12 to induce Mig and Crg-2 gene expression in purified hepatocytes also is accompanied by the coordinate up-regulation of the IFN-gamma R alpha and beta-chains, in the absence of IL-12R components. Supernatants of primary hepatocytes obtained from mice treated in vivo with IL-2/IL-12 or from hepatocytes treated in vitro with IFN-gamma contain increased chemotactic activity for enriched human and mouse CD3(+) T cells, as well as mouse DX5(+) NK cells. The hepatocyte-derived chemotactic activity for mouse T cells but not NK cells was ablated by Abs specific for Mig and Crg-2. These results suggest that parenchymal cells in some organs may contribute substantially to initiation and/or amplification of inflammatory or antitumor responses.

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