Abstract

The investigation was designed to determine whether the two tricyclic antidepressant agents (TCAs) clomipramine and imipramine and the selective reuptake inhibitor citalopram affect differentiation of human monocytes to macrophage-like cells (MAC-LCs). We established primary adherent cultures of peripheral blood monocytes and monitored their morphology, capacity for phagocytosis and antigen expression during transformation to MAC-LCs. As expected, maturation of monocytes to MACs is accompanied by changes in morphology, elevated expression of the antigens CD16 and CD51 and an increase in the percentage of phagocytic cells. Treatment of cells with the TCAs clomipramine (40 micromol/L) or imipramine (100 micromol/L) and with citalopram (100 micromol/L), for 11 days resulted in the following observations: (1) monocytes treated with TCAs never developed the morphology characteristic of the MAC-LCs; (2) TCAs reduced the percentage of phagocytic cells; (3) TCAs had little influence on the expression of CD14, CD16, CD51, and HLA-DR. However, when added after monocyte differentiation into MAC-LCs, citalopram and clomipramine no longer reduced the percentage of phagocytic cells and these effects were not simply due to irreversible cytotoxicity. Thus clomipramine, imipramine, and citalopram inhibit differentiation of human monocytes into MAC-LCs in vitro, but in a reversible manner.

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