Abstract

The control of endothelial cell proliferation is important in a variety of processes including wound healing and tumor-induced angiogenesis. We have observed that normal unstimulated human monocytes isolated from the blood can inhibit human endothelial cell proliferation. Monocyte-conditioned medium was fractionated by gel filtration chromatography, yielding a 175-fold enrichment of a growth inhibitory activity, designated monocyte-derived endothelial cell inhibitory factor (MECIF). MECIF was found to be protease sensitive, resistant to acid treatment, and heat labile. When conditioned medium was subjected to HPLC gel filtration, the inhibitory activity was eluted as a single peak with a molecular weight of 50–70 kDa. Several characteristics distinguish MECIF from previously described monocyte/macrophage-derived inhibitory factors. Unlike TGF-β, MECIF is heat labile and does not induce a mitogenic response in growth-arrested normal rat kidney cells. In addition, polyclonal antibodies specific for TGF-β or INF-γ do not inhibit MECIF activity. MECIF preparations show low levels of TNF-α, insufficient to promote the observed growth inhibitory effect. MECIF activity on human endothelial cells was found to be dose dependent and reversible. MECIF also appeared to be target cell selective in that it did not significantly alter the growth of human smooth muscle cells or skin flbroblasts. These data suggest that monocyte-derived factors may play a key role in inhibiting endothelial cell proliferation.

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