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Evidence for a mouse mesangial cell-derived factor that stimulates lymphocyte proliferation.
E P MacCarthy, … , Y M Ooi, B S Ooi
E P MacCarthy, … , Y M Ooi, B S Ooi
Published August 1, 1985
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1985;76(2):426-430. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI111989.
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Research Article

Evidence for a mouse mesangial cell-derived factor that stimulates lymphocyte proliferation.

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Abstract

The functions of the glomerular mesangium are served by at least two populations of cells--a cell bearing microfilaments that regulates blood flow, and a phagocytic cell bearing Ia determinants and Fc receptors. We provide evidence that mouse mesangial cells (bearing microfilaments) produce a factor(s) that stimulates spleen cell proliferation. The factor(s) appears to act via monocytes/macrophages, since its stimulatory activity is abrogated by prior depletion of the responding mononuclear cell population of monocytes/macrophages. Confirmation of its action on macrophages was documented by experiments that showed that medium from macrophages incubated with mesangial cell supernatant contained greater amounts of a factor that stimulated [3H]thymidine uptake by macrophage-depleted spleen cell populations. By the cothymocyte proliferation assay, it could be shown that mesangial cell supernatant induced splenic macrophage production of interleukin-1-like activity. Preliminary characterization reveals the factor to have a molecular weight greater than 100,000. Thus, a novel function is delineated for this mesangial cell type that appears capable of modulating the local immune response by providing an amplification signal.

Authors

E P MacCarthy, A Hsu, Y M Ooi, B S Ooi

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