Abstract
Interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) is a cytokine with a myriad of potent proinflammatory effects. Neutrophils are important immune effector cells in allergic and inflammatory lung diseases. We examined the effects of IL-1 alpha on human neutrophil migration across naked filters and human umbilical vein endothelial (HUVE) cell and type II-like pulmonary epithelial cell (A549) monolayers cultured on these filters. IL-1 alpha from 10(-13) to 10(-9) M induced dose-dependent neutrophil migration through both HUVE and A549 cellular monolayers but not through naked filters. Neutrophil migration was consistently greater through A549 monolayers compared with HUVE monolayers. IL-1 alpha-induced neutrophil migration was also time dependent, and the kinetics of neutrophil migration through HUVE and A549 monolayers were similar. Significant migration through either monolayer was not observed until 2 h, and maximal migration occurred at 3 h through A549 and 5 h though HUVE cellular monolayers. Supernatants of IL-1 alpha (10(-11) M)-stimulated HUVE and A549 monolayers induced significantly more migration of neutrophils across naked filters than 10(-11) M IL-1 alpha itself, suggesting the release of soluble secondary chemotactic factor(s). Pretreatment of HUVE and A549 monolayers with actinomycin D inhibited both IL-1 alpha-induced production of soluble chemotactic factor(s) and transcellular migration by > 90%. Supernatants from IL-1 alpha-treated HUVE and A549 cells contained significant concentrations of interleukin 8 (IL-8), and coincubation of these supernatants with anti-IL-8 inhibited approximately 50% of supernatant-induced chemotaxis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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More From: American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology
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