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Our previous studies have shown that [(14)C]-labelled cholesterol (CHOL) and arachidonic acid (AA) are transferred from macrophages (Mphi) to lymphocytes (LY) when these cells are co-cultured. In this study, we investigated whether these lipids can be transferred from control and thioglycollate-elicited Mphi (THIO-elicited Mphi) to various tissues and organs in vivo. For this purpose, control and THIO-elicited Mphi were pre-treated with [(14)C]-AA and [(3)H]-CHOL and then injected into the jugular vein of adult rats. More than 75% of the radioactivity injected was found in the liver of rats treated with [(14)C]-AA labelled-Mphi either control and THIO-stimulated. The radioactivity of [(3)H]-CHOL labelled Mphi was transferred mainly to the liver (51% in the control Mphi and 23% in the thioglycollate Mphi7) but it was also found in the kidney, lung and spleen. These results support the proposition that the transfer of lipids between cells also occurs in vivo. The full significance of this phenomenon however remains to be elucidated.
Our previous studies have shown that [(14)C]-labelled cholesterol (CHOL) and arachidonic acid (AA) are transferred from macrophages (Mphi) to lymphocytes (LY) when these cells are co-cultured. In this study, we investigated whether these lipids can be transferred from control and thioglycollate-elicited Mphi (THIO-elicited Mphi) to various tissues and organs in vivo. For this purpose, control and THIO-elicited Mphi were pre-treated with [(14)C]-AA and [(3)H]-CHOL and then injected into the jugular vein of adult rats. More than 75% of the radioactivity injected was found in the liver of rats treated with [(14)C]-AA labelled-Mphi either control and THIO-stimulated. The radioactivity of [(3)H]-CHOL labelled Mphi was transferred mainly to the liver (51% in the control Mphi and 23% in the thioglycollate Mphi7) but it was also found in the kidney, lung and spleen. These results support the proposition that the transfer of lipids between cells also occurs in vivo. The full significance of this phenomenon however remains to be elucidated.
Arachidonic acid (AA) is incorporated and exported by macrophages. This fatty acid is also transferred from macrophages (Mphi) to lymphocytes (LY) in co-culture. This observation led us to investigate the effect of macrophages pre-loaded with AA on concanavalin A (Con A)-stimulated lymphocyte proliferation. The experiments were performed in co-culture. This condition reproduces the in vivo microenvironment in which the modulation of lymphocyte proliferation is dependent on the interaction with macrophages. Lymphocytes obtained from untreated rats or from intraperitoneally thioglycolate-injected rats (THIO-treated) were co-cultured with macrophages from the same rats. Firstly, macrophages were co-cultured for 48 h with Con A-stimulated lymphocytes in different proportions: 0.5, 1, 2.5, 5, 10, 20 and 30% of 5 x 10(5) lymphocytes per well. At 1% proportion, macrophages caused maximum stimulation of lymphocyte proliferation; a four- to five-fold increase, for cells from both thioglycolate-treated and untreated rats, respectively, whereas at 20% it caused maximum inhibition. In addition, 1 or 20% macrophages were pre-loaded with several AA concentrations during a period of 6 h and co-cultured with lymphocytes. At 180 microM AA and 1% macrophages, lymphocyte proliferation was inhibited (by 25%), whereas at 20% macrophages, proliferation was increased, by 25- and three-fold, respectively, for cells from untreated and THIO-treated rats. AA added directly to the medium reduced lymphocyte proliferation, also being toxic to these cells at 100 microM. No toxic effects of AA were observed on macrophages. Additional evidence suggests that nitric oxide production is involved in the modulation of lymphocyte proliferation by AA-pre-loaded macrophages. These findings support the proposition that AA can directly modulate lymphocyte proliferation and the interaction between macrophages and lymphocytes.
We have adapted an Ortho ICP‐22 flow cytometer (Ortho Instruments, Westwood MA) for the simultaneous measurement of three independent fluorochromes and cell volume. This has been accomplished by the addition of a third photomultiplier tube and the development of a new electronic cell volume (ECV) flow cell. Cells are first analyzed as they pass through the 100 U ECV aperture and are then excited approximately 15 μsec later by the 365 nm mercury arc beam reflected by a 400 nm dicroic mirror. Independent blue, green and red signals can be associated by a delay circuit to the ECV signal from the same cell. We have developed this system as an aid in the analysis of tumor cell and macrophage heterogeneity and differentiation. The choice of stain combinations to be used is extremely flexible and permits the anlysis of a wide range of enzyme activities in conjunction with DNA/RNA and phagocytic probes. Data presented indicates the value of this approach in identifying the presence of plasminogen activator‐like activity in both tumor and inflammatory cells within a malignant effusion as well as the quantitative expression of a number of markers of macrophage differentiation. Although the described techniques have been developed on a mercury are instrument, they can be used equally well with cell sorters.
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