Abstract

Expression of the two known receptors for TNF was studied in the promyelocytic leukemia cell line HL-60 before and after differentiation of the cells along the granulocyte lineage (induced by incubation with retinoic acid), or along the macrophage lineage (induced by incubation with the phorbol diester, PMA). The extent of inhibition of TNF binding by receptor-specific antisera, as well as the size of the complexes formed after cross-linking TNF to its receptors on intact cells, indicated that both receptor species were expressed on the surface of the undifferentiated HL60 cells. Differentiation into granulocyte-like cells resulted in some increase in TNF binding. The increase was apparently due to enhanced expression of the 75-kDa TNF-R, whereas the amounts of the 55-kDa TNF-R did not change significantly. In contrast, in HL-60 cells induced to differentiate into macrophage-like cells, expression of the 55-kDa TNF-R species was completely abolished. The pattern of TNF-R expression in the differentiated HL-60 cells was similar to that observed in leukocytes isolated from peripheral blood: on granulocytes, there were about equal amounts of both receptor species, whereas on monocytes the 75-kDa receptor was predominant. The loss of 55-kDa receptors during differentiation of HL-60 cells into macrophage-like cells was accompanied by a pronounced decrease in the level of the mRNA for that receptor, suggesting that at least part of the change in TNF-R expression is due to mechanisms that control the amounts of receptor mRNA. Although little is yet known regarding the functional differences between the two receptor species, marked changes in the pattern of their expression, as observed during HL-60 cell differentiation, are likely to alter the kind of response of the cells to TNF and may therefore play an important role in the coordination of TNF effects in the organism.

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