Effects of gamma interferon on release of tumor necrosis factor alpha from lipopolysaccharide-tolerant human monocyte-derived macrophages.

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RESUMO

After an initial stimulation of human monocyte-derived macrophages with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which produces substantial release of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), a subsequent exposure to LPS results in about an order-of-magnitude reduction in the levels of TNF-alpha released. We have shown that macrophages which have been stimulated with LPS and then maintained in culture without LPS for as long as 2 weeks do not regain their original capacity to secrete TNF-alpha upon a second LPS challenge. After 2 to 4 days in adherent culture, monocyte-derived macrophages which were not pretreated with LPS also experience a measurable decline in their capacity to release TNF-alpha in response to an initial LPS stimulation. When compared with these previously nonstimulated cells, however, the levels of TNF-alpha released by LPS-pretreated cells in response to a second LPS challenge decline by over 90% after 8 to 9 days in culture. Unstimulated cells spontaneously release barely detectable levels of TNF-alpha. In contrast to the release of TNF-alpha, unstimulated cells release significant levels of prostaglandin E2 continuously over time, and these levels are variably increased by no more than a factor of two in response to a single LPS stimulation. Prostaglandin E2 levels released by LPS-pretreated cells in response to a second LPS stimulation are much closer to the levels released by unstimulated cells. We have also demonstrated that gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) enhances TNF-alpha release from LPS-stimulated macrophages but not from phorbol myristate acetate-stimulated cells. Addition of IFN-gamma to macrophages either during the initial stimulation or during a second stimulation with LPS enhances levels of TNF-alpha released after the second LPS challenge. The greatest enhancement is observed when IFN-gamma is added during both exposures to LPS, but addition of IFN-gamma during only the initial LPS stimulation still results in marked enhancement of TNF-alpha release in response to a second stimulation with LPS 24 h later. If an interval of 2 days of culture in medium alone separates the first and second 24-h LPS stimulations, IFN-gamma enhances TNF-alpha release only when it is included during the second LPS exposure, indicating that, unlike the persistence of endotoxin tolerance, enhancement of TNF-alpha release by IFN-gamma is transient.

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