Demonstration of Accelerated and Increased Migration Inhibition Factor Release in vivo in a PPD Retest Reaction

1982 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
A.C.M.Th. van Maarsseveen ◽  
G. Bomhof ◽  
R.J. Scheper
1973 ◽  
Vol 138 (4) ◽  
pp. 784-797 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takeshi Yoshida ◽  
Hidekichi Sonozaki ◽  
Stanley Cohen

Stimulation of sensitized lymphocytes by specific antigen in vitro leads to the production of migration inhibition factor (MIF). In the case of the pure soluble protein, or hapten-protein antigens used in the present studies, this MIF production was a property of the T lymphocytes in the cell suspensions. When PPD was used, B cells, as well as T cells, produced MIF. Similarly, PPD could stimulate B cells to mediate the macrophage disappearance reaction, a reaction which is known to be a T cell-dependent in vivo manifestation of cell-mediated immunity. Suspensions of lymphocytes from nonimmune donors could also be stimulated by PPD; in this case, B cells, but not T cells, produced MIF. The factors produced by the two lymphocyte subpopulations appeared to be similar, if not identical, on the basis of physico-chemical criteria. It is suggested that PPD stimulates B cells for MIF production because of its role as a B cell mitogen. The ability of endotoxin lipopolysaccharide, another B cell mitogen, to also induce MIF production by B cells supports this contention. Thus, although activation of lymphocytes for MIF production by specific antigen is a property of T cells, B cells as well as T cells may be so activated by agents which act nonspecifically. This may prove to have implications for in vivo events involved in immunization. In addition, these observations lend further support to the concept that lymphokine production represents a general biologic phenomenon in addition to playing a role in the effector mechanisms for reactions of cell-mediated immunity.


1982 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giorgio Cortesina ◽  
Giovanni Patrick Cavallo ◽  
Fabio Beatrice ◽  
Alberto Sartoris ◽  
Mario Bussi ◽  
...  

The production of leukocyte migration inhibition factor (LIF) from lymphocytes after stimulation with 3 M KCl soluble tumor and normal mucosa extracts was investigated in 30 patients with laryngeal carcinoma at different development stages and in 30 normal donors. The experiments were performed in heterologous and autologous systems. In heterologous systems 3 M KCl tumor extracts induced LIF production by heterologous lymphocytes from patients in 91 % of the cases, and normal mucosa extracts induced LIF production by heterologous lymphocytes from patients in 73 % of the cases and from normal donors in 90 % of the cases. In autologous systems 3 M KCl tumor extracts induced LIF production by autologous lymphocytes from the same patients in 65 % of the cases, whereas the normal laryngeal mucosa extracts induced LIF production by the same autologous lymphocytes in the 6 % of the cases. The high positivity percentage of the test in heterologous systems could be related to differences in the major histocompatibility complex. The 65 % test positivity in autologous systems using tumor extracts could be related to the presence of tumor associated antigens.


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