A T-cell-derived lymphokine was identified by its ability to support the growth of a subset of B-cell hybridomas. Hybrids that failed to survive in the absence of this molecule represented a major proportion of rat-mouse hybridomas but were very rare among mouse-mouse B-cell hybrids. Stable factor-dependent B-cell hybridomas were used to monitor the purification of the growth factor from the supernatant of a clonotypically stimulated mouse helper T-cell clone. Sequential fractionation using gel filtration, anionexchange chromatography, and reversed-phase HPLC resolved the factor from other B-cell growth factors and yielded a single-chain protein characterized by a major charge (pI = 5-7) and molecular mass (22-to 29-kDa) heterogeneity, probably due to variations in glycosylation. The NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of this protein, which is active on B-cell hybridomas in the 0.1 pM range, showed no significant homology with that of known lymphokines. Because the purified factor also supported the growth and survival in vitro of murine plasmacytomas (to be published elsewhere), it was provisionally designated interleukin-HP1 (where H stands for hybridoma and P stands for plasmacytoma).
In humans, sterile immunity against malaria can be consistently induced through exposure to the bites of thousands of irradiated infected mosquitoes. The same level of protection has yet to be achieved using subunit vaccines. Recent studies have indicated an essential function for intrahepatic parasites, the stage after the mosquito bite, and thus for antigens expressed during this stage. We report here the identification of liver-stage antigen 3, which is expressed both in the mosquito and liver-stage parasites. This Plasmodium falciparum 200-kilodalton protein is highly conserved, and showed promising antigenic and immunogenic properties. In chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), the primates most closely related to humans and that share a similar susceptibility to P. falciparum liver-stage infection, immunization with LSA-3 induced protection against successive heterologous challenges with large numbers of P. falciparum sporozoites.
A factor that promotes the growth of certain B cell hybridomas and of plasmacytomas is shown to be produced by normal human fibroblasts and by a line of human osteosarcoma cells (MG-63) after treatment with IL-1 or TNF. The hybridoma-plasmacytoma growth factor (HPGF) is identified with a 26 kD protein whose mRNA was previously shown to be induced in the same cells by the same inducers. First, poly(A)-rich RNA extracted from IL-1-treated cells could be enriched in HPGF-mRNA content by hybridization to 26 kD cDNA. Second, MG-63-derived HPGF purified to electrophoretic homogeneity was subjected to amino acid sequence analysis, whereby the NH2-terminal sequence was found to match the nucleotide sequence of a 26 kD cDNA clone.
The human '26-kd protein' is a secreted glycoprotein expressed, for example, in (blood) Here we show that the recombinant 26-kd protein exhibits a high growth factor activity when assayed on an IL-
Interleukin-HP1 (HP1) is a murine T cell-derived lymphokine, originally described as a growth factor for B cell hybridomas and plasmacytomas, that was recently shown to stimulate growth and differentiation of normal B and T lymphocytes. Here, we describe a cDNA for HP1 that was isolated from a library prepared using mRNA of a murine helper T cell clone activated with a clonotypic antibody. The cDNA, which hybridizes with a mRNA of approximately 1300 bp, encodes a polypeptide consisting of 211 amino acids with a typical signal sequence of 24 residues followed by 187 amino acids, which form the mature protein (Mr = 21,710). No N-glycosylation site but several potential O-glycosylation sites were identified in the predicted sequence. Comparison of the cDNA sequence of HP1 with that of human interleukin 6 disclosed a homology of 65% at the DNA level and of 42% at the protein level with a maximum of 57% for the segment spanning residues 42-102 of mature HP1. Considering the functional homology that was previously established between these two proteins, we therefore propose that HP1 be renamed murine interleukin 6.
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