Abstract

INTERLEUKIN-1 (IL-1) PLAYS A controversial role in the immune response. Besides its activation of immune cells and juvenile central nervous system cells, monocyte-derived IL-1 may be able to stimulate the malignant transformation and proliferation of glial brain tumor cells expressing IL-1 receptors. The aim of this study was to determine the growth pattern and the IL-1β release of long-term cultured peripheral blood monocytes of glioma patients. At 6- to 7-day intervals, the vital monocytes, characterized by CD14 immunophenotyping, were counted. By the use of a specific IL-1β enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, the IL-1β content of monocyte culture supernatants derived from 13 subjects with glioma and from 12 controls were compared at Days 7, 21, and 100 of culture. Cell clusters of monocytes derived from glioblastoma patients survived more than 250 days in culture, whereas control monocytes survived only up to 114 days. The IL-1β release of glioma-associated peripheral blood monocyte cultures was about 50 times higher as compared with control monocyte cultures. Dexamethasone treatment at the time of blood sampling and recurrences of the gliomas did not influence the increase in the IL-1β expression of glioma monocytes. It seemed that at least subsets of glioma-associated blood monocytes, although they had been removed from the circulation, remained activated for a long period of time. We conclude that increased IL-1β production of glioma-associated peripheral blood monocytes and their longevity in vitro may be features of aberrant immune cell subsets. In future studies, the exact phenotyping of monocyte subsets will be mandatory.

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