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      Interleukin-4 is an autocrine growth factor secreted by the L-428 Reed-Sternberg cell.

      Blood
      Antibodies, Binding, Competitive, Blotting, Northern, Blotting, Western, Cell Division, DNA, Neoplasm, biosynthesis, Hodgkin Disease, metabolism, pathology, Humans, Interleukin-4, genetics, immunology, physiology, Molecular Weight, RNA, Messenger, Receptors, Interleukin-4, Receptors, Mitogen, Reed-Sternberg Cells, Tumor Cells, Cultured

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          Abstract

          Recent evidence indicates that Reed-Sternberg (RS) cells from many cases of Hodgkin's disease have features of activated lymphocytes and that lymphokines from activated lymphocytes induce proliferation of L-428 RS cells. It is shown here that a lymphokine similar to a lymphokine secreted by activated lymphocytes is secreted by L-428 cells. This lymphokine has a molecular weight approximately equal to 68,000 daltons, identical to glycosylated recombinant interleukin-4 (rIL-4), and cross-reacts with monoclonal anti-IL-4 in Western immunoblotting. This Hodgkin's cell growth factor (HCGF) is 100% neutralized by polyclonal anti-IL-4 antibodies and competes for the IL-4 receptor. After acid-elution, the L-428 RS cell has been shown to have 3,396 +/- 120 high-affinity receptor sites/cell. HCGF competes with rIL-4 for this receptor and L-428 cells contain mRNA for IL-4. Although all evidence indicates that IL-4 is an important secreted autocrine growth factor for L-428 RS cells, anti-IL-4 has no effect on the sustained serum-free growth of these Hodgkin's cells, suggesting that either the IL-4 receptor and the IL-4 receptor-growth factor complex are protected from antibody inhibition or other mechanisms are responsible for the sustained proliferation of L-428 RS cells.

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