» Articles » PMID: 3408816

Human Macrophage Maturation in Vitro: Expression of Functional Transferrin Binding Sites of High Affinity

Overview
Journal Blut
Specialty Hematology
Date 1988 Aug 1
PMID 3408816
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Human blood monocytes (mo) when cultured in suspension on hydrophobic teflon membranes undergo terminal maturation to macrophages (MO). Together with the appearance of new lineage-restricted differentiation antigens, mature MO but not blood mo, express transferrin (TF) receptor molecules as detected by immunostaining methods. Here we report that radio- and fluorescein-labelled TF binds to a single class of high-affinity binding sites on MO but not on mo. As mo mature in vitro in the presence of human serum, their receptor numbers increase to about 10(6) per cell, showing an apparent Kd for Fe2TF of approximately 5 nM. These receptor numbers were comparable with our estimates for cultured K 562 human tumor cells, and about 20x greater than reported for human MO cultured in the presence of fetal calf serum. Our MO showed 58Fe uptake comparable with uptake by tumor cells and also exhibited TF-promoted uptakes of 61Ga. The possibility that MO might recycle stored iron through receptor-bound apoTF was not supported by experiments which showed that their Fe2TF receptors had much lower affinity for apoTF (Kd greater than 1 microM) and which could not detect separate high-affinity receptors specific for apoTF. Expression of TF receptors was not substantially altered by treatment with human recombinant interferon-gamma.

Citing Articles

Characterization of MAX.3 antigen, a glycoprotein expressed on mature macrophages, dendritic cells and blood platelets: identity with CD84.

Krause S, Rehli M, Heinz S, Ebner R, Andreesen R Biochem J. 2000; 346 Pt 3:729-36.

PMID: 10698700 PMC: 1220906.


Phenotypic analysis of functionally associated molecules on peripheral blood and synovial fluid monocytes from arthritis patients.

Gadd S, Felzmann T, Majdic O, Maurer D, Petera P, Chen W Rheumatol Int. 1992; 12(4):153-7.

PMID: 1439482 DOI: 10.1007/BF00274935.

References
1.
Sutherland R, Delia D, Schneider C, Newman R, Kemshead J, Greaves M . Ubiquitous cell-surface glycoprotein on tumor cells is proliferation-associated receptor for transferrin. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1981; 78(7):4515-9. PMC: 319822. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.78.7.4515. View

2.
Andreesen R, Osterholz J, Bross K, Schulz A, Luckenbach G, LOHR G . Cytotoxic effector cell function at different stages of human monocyte-macrophage maturation. Cancer Res. 1983; 43(12 Pt 1):5931-6. View

3.
Chambers T . The cellular basis of bone resorption. Clin Orthop Relat Res. 1980; (151):283-93. View

4.
Franklin W, Mason D, Pulford K, Falini B, Bliss E, Gatter K . Immunohistological analysis of human mononuclear phagocytes and dendritic cells by using monoclonal antibodies. Lab Invest. 1986; 54(3):322-35. View

5.
MacSween R, Macdonald R . Iron metabolism by reticuloendothelial cells. In vitro uptake of transferrin-bound iron by rat and rabbit cells. Lab Invest. 1969; 21(3):230-5. View