Artigo Acesso aberto

Measurement of Cytokine Secretion, Intracellular Protein Expression, and mRNA in Resting and Stimulated Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells

2000; American Society for Microbiology; Volume: 7; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1128/cdli.7.6.920-924.2000

ISSN

1098-6588

Autores

Kathleen E. Sullivan, Joie Cutilli, Lisa M. Piliero, Darlene Ghavimi-Alagha, Stuart E. Starr, Donald E. Campbell, Steven D. Douglas,

Tópico(s)

Toxin Mechanisms and Immunotoxins

Resumo

ABSTRACT Quantitation of cytokine production is a valuable adjunct to standard immunologic assays in defining several pathologic processes. Nevertheless, there is little agreement about which tissues should be assayed, which type of assay should be performed, and which stimulation protocol should be used. As these types of assays enter the clinical arena, there is need for standardization. There is also a need to maximize the amount of information which may be derived from a single sample. We compared secreted interleukin 4 (IL-4), IL-2, IL-6, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), and gamma interferon proteins as measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with intracellular cytokine production (IL-2 and gamma interferon) as detected by flow cytometry and quantitative competitive PCR for IL-2, IL-4, TNF-α, and gamma interferon mRNA and cDNA. Results from unstimulated cells and cells stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate, phytohemagglutinin, and phorbol myristate acetate plus phytohemagglutin were compared. All three methodologies detected significant stimulation of cytokine production. The combination of phytohemagglutinin and phorbol myristate acetate was overall the most-potent stimulus.

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