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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 148, Issue 11 3583-3587, Copyright © 1992 by American Association of Immunologists
ARTICLES |
S Prakash and DJ Wyler
Division of Geographic Medicine and Infectious Diseases, New England Medical Center Hospitals, Boston, MA 02111.
Granulomas that form around Schistosoma mansoni eggs deposited in the liver secrete a variety of fibrogenic factors that may provide a molecular link between chronic inflammation and hepatic fibrogenesis in schistosomiasis. We recently isolated from conditioned medium of egg granuloma cultures a approximately equal to 60-kDa heparin-binding growth factor for fibroblasts. Because this protein is distinct from other defined heparin-binding growth factors, we designated it "fibroblast stimulating factor-1" (FsF-1). We now report that FsF-1 is a lymphokine. We prepared IgG antibody against purified FsF-1 and determined that it did not cross-react with a variety of growth factors or recombinant interleukins. Using two-color flow cytometry of dissociated granuloma cell suspensions, we observed that approximately 20% to 25% of granuloma CD4+ lymphocytes express surface FsF-1. We isolated CD4+ granuloma lymphocytes by FACS and observed that these cells spontaneously secrete into culture supernatant a fibroblast mitogen that is neutralized by anti-FsF-1 antibody. Furthermore, anti- FsF-1 can specifically immunoprecipitate a metabolically labeled protein produced by the granuloma CD4+ lymphocytes. The labeled protein has the same apparent molecular mass (approximately equal to 60 kDa) as FsF-1 purified from granuloma culture supernatants. These findings define CD4+ lymphocytes as a source of FsF-1. Because FsF-1 has biologic and chemical features distinct from most other defined lymphokines and from other heparin-binding growth factors, FsF-1 appears to be a novel lymphokine.
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