Biochemical characterization and purification of HILDA, a human lymphokine active on eosinophils and bone marrow cells

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Abstract

We previously described a lymphokine termed HILDA (for human interleukin DA) produced by T-lymphocyte alloreactive clones after antigenic stimulation. This factor sustains the growth of a murine IL3-sensitive cell line (DA2). In addition, HILDA is a potent activator of eosinophils and displays a burst-promoting activity on human bone marrow. In the present study, HILDA was purified to homogeneity from T-cell clone supernatant using successively sequential concentration, concanavalin A (ConA) affinity chromatography with differential elution (α-D glucopyranoside and α-D mannopyranoside), high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) gel filtration and reverse-phase HPLC. The pure material appeared as a 38-kd glycoprotein on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) under reducing or nonreducing conditions. Biologic activity could be recovered from SDS-PAGE gel slices corresponding to the 38-kd band. We conclude from the specificity of the DA-2 cell line and biochemical characteristics described that this lymphokine is different from other known factors produced by human T lymphocytes.

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Godard, A., Gascan, H., Naulet, J., Peyrat, M. A., Jacques, Y., Soulillou, J. P., & Moreau, J. F. (1988). Biochemical characterization and purification of HILDA, a human lymphokine active on eosinophils and bone marrow cells. Blood, 71(6), 1618–1623. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v71.6.1618.bloodjournal7161618

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