Colony promoting activity: differences from interleukin-3 and similarities to interleukin-6

1990 
Abstract The supernatant of long-term bone marrow culture contains colony promoting activity (CPA) which does not have granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating activity (CSF) but which enhances granulocyte-macrophage (CM) colony formation in the presence of CSR CPA might consist of IL-3 or IL-3-like activity, since CPA stimulates proliferation and differentiation of more immature cells to CSF-responding granulocytes-macrophage progenitors (GM-CFC), and since IL-3 also stimulates immature hemopoietic cells to proliferate and differentiate to functional blood cells. IL-1 and IL-6 are also known to enhance GM colony formation. One or both of these molecules can accordingly be another candidate for CPA. In the present study, GM-CSF activity of IL-3 was dependent on the batch of serum: it was negative in the presence of fetal calf serum, but positive in the presence of horse serum. In contrast, GM-CSF and CPA showed no such dependence on the batch of serum. The addition of IL-3 to GM colony assay system did not enhance but rather suppressed GM colony formation. The supernatant of long-term bone marrow culture which contains substantial levels of CPA did not stimulate proliferation of IL-3 dependent DA-1 cells, but facilitated the proliferation of IL-6 dependent, MH60-BSF2 cells. No detectable level of IL-1 activity was found in the supernatant. These results indicate that CPA is different from IL-1, IL-3 or GM-CSF, but similar to or the same as IL-6.
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