Abstract

The cell surface expression of I region-associated (Ia) antigens by murine and human macrophages has been shown by investigators from a number of laboratories to be induced in a dose-dependent fashion by IFN-gamma, which is free of other lymphokines. The experiments described in this report demonstrate that fibroblast-derived IFN-beta exerts an antagonistic effect on IFN-gamma induced Ia expression in murine macrophages. Simultaneous addition of IFN-beta and IFN-gamma to peritoneal exudate macrophages results in decreased Ia expression when compared with macrophages treated with IFN-gamma only. Different sources of highly purified IFN-beta, as well as a recombinant human IFN-alpha (A/D Bgl; shown previously to be as active as IFN-beta in several other murine systems) acted in a similar antagonistic fashion to IFN-gamma-induced Ia induction. The down-regulation of Ia expression by IFN-beta is dose-dependent over a concentration range up to 100 U/ml. Time-course experiments indicated that for IFN-beta to down-regulate IFN-gamma-induced Ia, it had to be present either before stimulation with IFN-gamma or during the first 24 hr of simultaneous stimulation. Further experiments in which a highly specific antibody against IFN-alpha/beta was added to the cultures confirmed the findings of the time-course experiments. Inhibitors of the arachidonic acid pathway failed to reverse the effect of IFN-beta to reduce Ia antigen expression, which suggests that this inhibition is not prostaglandin mediated. Thus, these findings support a role for type I IFN as naturally occurring substances that negatively regulate the expression of class II molecules.

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