Human macrophages obtained by in vitro maturation of peripheral blood monocytes express a surface antigen, PAM-1, recognized by a monoclonal antibody and typical of pulmonary alveolar and tissue macrophages. PAM-1, undetectable in freshly isolated peripheral blood monocytes, was expressed in monocyte-derived macrophages after 3 days of in vitro adherent culture and was maximal after 14-15 days (50%-60% of positive cells). Similar levels of PAM-1 positivity were observed in non-adherent monocyte-derived macrophages suggesting that cell adhesion was not a critical requisite for the expression of this antigen. Bacterial lipolysaccharide and a monocyte chemotactic protein preparation respectively suppressed and upregulated PAM-1 expression in monocyte-derived macrophages. In contrast, interferon-gamma, although enhancing the levels of class II HLA-DR antigen in monocyte-derived macrophages, did not influence the kinetics of appearance and the levels of PAM-1 in these cells. Thus, expression of PAM-1, which is restricted to certain stages of the monocyte-macrophage differentiation pathway, is also differentially modulated by activation signals, which can be present in the microenvironment of inflammed tissues.

EXPRESSION AND MODULATION OF A MONONUCLEAR PHAGOCYTE DIFFERENTIATION ANTIGEN (PAM-1) DURING INVITRO MATURATION OF PERIPHERAL-BLOOD MONOCYTES

POLI , GUIDO;
1993-01-01

Abstract

Human macrophages obtained by in vitro maturation of peripheral blood monocytes express a surface antigen, PAM-1, recognized by a monoclonal antibody and typical of pulmonary alveolar and tissue macrophages. PAM-1, undetectable in freshly isolated peripheral blood monocytes, was expressed in monocyte-derived macrophages after 3 days of in vitro adherent culture and was maximal after 14-15 days (50%-60% of positive cells). Similar levels of PAM-1 positivity were observed in non-adherent monocyte-derived macrophages suggesting that cell adhesion was not a critical requisite for the expression of this antigen. Bacterial lipolysaccharide and a monocyte chemotactic protein preparation respectively suppressed and upregulated PAM-1 expression in monocyte-derived macrophages. In contrast, interferon-gamma, although enhancing the levels of class II HLA-DR antigen in monocyte-derived macrophages, did not influence the kinetics of appearance and the levels of PAM-1 in these cells. Thus, expression of PAM-1, which is restricted to certain stages of the monocyte-macrophage differentiation pathway, is also differentially modulated by activation signals, which can be present in the microenvironment of inflammed tissues.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/1478
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