Peritoneal cells from highly susceptible BALB/c mice were infected with Leishmania major and cultured for various times in vitro. The culture supernatants contained significant levels of IL-1 which were consistently higher than those in the cell cultures stimulated with an optimal concentration of LPS. This finding extends to a macrophage cell line, P388D1, and peritoneal exudate cells stimulated with starch in vivo. However, the level of IL-1 produced was significantly reduced when the cells were preincubated with a lymphokine preparation (supernatant of Con A-stimulated rat spleen cells). The level of IL-1 produced seems to be directly correlated with the degree of parasitization of the macrophages. A similar and dose-dependent reduction in IL-1 production by infected macrophages could also be obtained when the cells were preincubated with IFN-gamma. This finding is in direct contrast to that of visceral leishmaniasis in which peritoneal macrophages from BALB/c mice infected with Leishmania donovani not only fail to produce IL-1 but also lose the capacity to produce IL-1. This apparent discrepancy is discussed in terms of a possible difference in the induction of cell-mediated immunity between the two leishmanial diseases.
CITATION STYLE
Cillari, E., Dieli, M., Maltese, E., Milano, S., Salerno, A., & Liew, F. Y. (1989). Enhancement of macrophage IL-1 production by Leishmania major infection in vitro and its inhibition by IFN-gamma. The Journal of Immunology, 143(6), 2001–2005. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.143.6.2001
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