Author:
Paganelli KA,Evans SS,Han T,Ozer H
Abstract
Abstract
Malignant B cells from hairy cell leukemia (HCL) patients are unable to proliferate when stimulated with standard B cell mitogens. Using chromatographically purified B cell growth factor (BCGF), HCL can be stimulated to proliferate as assessed by incorporation of tritiated thymidine [3HTdR] into DNA. Proliferation was found to be time dependent, with no detectable 3H-TdR incorporation in up to three days of culture, and significant stimulation evident at days 6 and 10. The presence of 10% BCGF in culture was an absolute requirement for HCL proliferation; however, this BCGF-induced DNA synthesis could be further augmented by the addition of anti-immunoglobulin heavy chain antibodies. BCGF-induced proliferation was abrogated in six of six patients by addition of 1,000 U/mL of recombinant alpha 2-interferon (IFN) at day 0, although 1,000 U/mL of recombinant gamma-IFN had no inhibitory effect in five of six patients studied. Specific cellular receptors for type I IFN were demonstrated in HCL by inhibition of binding of 125I-alpha 2-IFN by a 40-fold excess of unlabeled alpha 2 or beta IFN with no inhibition by unlabeled gamma-IFN. These data demonstrate that malignant HCL lymphoblasts express specific type I IFN receptors and that type I, but not type II IFN, can inhibit growth factor-induced DNA synthesis by hairy cells in vitro. They further suggest a direct antiproliferative mechanism of action for IFN in HCL and predict equivalent clinical activity by either alpha or beta, but not gamma IFN in this malignancy.
Publisher
American Society of Hematology
Subject
Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry
Cited by
72 articles.
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