Abstract
The cloned monocyte/macrophage cell line RAW 264.7 was investigated for interleukin 1 (IL-1) production. Of the inducers tested, bacterial lipopolysaccharide was found to be the most effective. The cyclic nucleotide analogs 8-BrcAMP and 8-BrcGMP were also tested, with only 8-BrcGMP being capable of inducing a small amount of IL-1 activity. Gel filtration studies revealed thymocyte mitogenic and comitogenic activity in three molecular-weight peaks: > 70,000, 30,000 to 40,000, and 12,000 to 18,000 Da. The multiple-molecular-weight forms were present when samples were prepared under serum-free conditions and also when samples were prepared and chromatographed in high ionic strength NaCl or under disulfide reducing conditions. Molecular charge heterogeneity was observed when proteins were chromatographed using column chromatofocusing (PBE 94). The intermediate-molecular-weight form eluted from the column over a pH range of 5.0 to 5.4; while the low-molecular-weight form eluted at three separate pH's: ⩾7.4 (unbound material), 5.2, and 4.8. The low-molecular-weight and intermediate-molecular-weight forms exhibited different dose-response curves when assayed under conditions used by other investigators (1 × 10 7 cells/ml; phytohemagglutinin, 1 μg/ml), but very similar dose-response curves when assayed under conditions used by our laboratory (2 × 10 6 cells/ml; concanavalin A, 0.25 μg/ml) in a thymocyte comitogen assay. The possible relationship of these multiple-molecular-weight species of thymocyte comitogenic activity from RAW 264.7 to other biological activities from cloned and noncloned cellular sources is discussed.
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