Characterization of a novel anti-inflammatory factor produced by RM3/1 macrophages derived from glucocorticoid treated human monocytes.

1995 
Glucocorticoids exert their anti-inflammatory activity by modulating the functions of various cell types including macrophages. They also induce the generation of a distinct macrophage subtype defined by the surface antigen RM3/1 which appears to be associated with the down-regulation of inflammation. Supernatants from these cells were found to exert a dose-dependent anti-inflammatory effect, particularly in the early phase as shown in the 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) induced footpad edema of mice. By using conventional purification methods the anti-inflammatory factor was found to have a molecular mass of about 78 kD and an isoelectric point of about 7.9. Heat lability and sensitivity to trypsin and proteinase K indicate the protein nature of the anti-inflammatory factor. The inhibition of the early phase of inflammation and the molecular weight suggest that the anti-inflammatory agent released from RM3/1 macrophages is a novel protein different from other anti-inflammatory proteins described so far.
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