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. 1987 Sep 15;139(6):1855-60.

Stimulation of endothelial cell binding of lymphocytes by tumor necrosis factor

  • PMID: 3497979

Stimulation of endothelial cell binding of lymphocytes by tumor necrosis factor

D Cavender et al. J Immunol. .

Abstract

Lymphokines and monokines have been reported to affect endothelial cell (EC) morphology and function. In experiments here described, we have demonstrated that recombinant tumor necrosis factor (TNF) stimulates the adhesion of T lymphocytes to confluent monolayers of human umbilical vein EC. The increase in adhesion induced by TNF was EC-specific inasmuch as preincubation of the lymphocytes with TNF did not alter binding, and preincubation of human dermal fibroblasts with TNF did not increase their inherently low adhesiveness for lymphocytes. Stimulation of T-EC binding occurred after treatment of the EC with as little as 0.01 U/ml (1 pg/ml) of TNF. In kinetic experiments, preincubation of EC with TNF for 4 hr resulted in optimal adhesion. TNF-treated EC retained their increased adhesiveness after fixation with paraformaldehyde, suggesting that TNF stimulated binding by increasing the expression or accessibility of EC surface receptors for lymphocytes. Although antibodies to the lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 alpha- or beta-chains on the T cell markedly inhibited unstimulated T-EC binding, such antibodies had no effect on the increase in EC adhesiveness induced by TNF, indicating that the increased binding resulted from the generation of an alternate binding receptor on the EC membrane. These findings provide additional evidence that cytokines participate in the mobilization of mononuclear cells in the chronic inflammatory reaction by stimulation of the adhesiveness of endothelium for circulating lymphocytes.

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