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Results 651 - 700 of 858
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Kitagaki K - - 1996
The effect of cyclosporin A on apoptosis in eosinophils was examined to clarify the inhibitory mechanisms of cyclosporin A on allergen-induced eosinophilia in the airway. Eosinophils in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from sensitized rats after inhaling an allergen were used. More than 50% of the eosinophils that died spontaneously by apoptosis ...
Rothenberg M E - - 1996
BACKGROUND: Understanding the processes that control selective eosinophilia is of fundamental importance in a variety of human diseases (e.g., allergies, parasitic infections, malignancy). Interleukin 5, an eosinophil-specific growth and activating factor, and eotaxin appear to collaborate in this process. Eotaxin is a recently described chemotactic factor that belongs to the ...
Hamada A - - 1996
Phenotypic change of blood-type eosinophils to tissue-type eosinophils is induced by various cytokines. We examined the effect of nerve growth factor (NGF) as a candidate for a constitutive cytokine which is able to induce the phenotypic change of eosinophils. The viability of human peripheral blood eosinophils cultured for 4 d ...
Kroegel C - - 1996
We investigated the secretion of interleukin (IL)-13 into the airways in 10 mild allergic asthmatics by employing local allergen challenge, and compared the data both to IL-4 levels and eosinophil numbers obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL). Appropriate allergen or saline were endoscopically instilled into different airway segments, which were lavaged ...
Walsh G M - - 1996
Peripheral blood (PB) eosinophils rapidly undergo apoptosis and cell death in vitro unless cultured in the presence of cytokines such as granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in which their survival is prolonged for up to 10 days. CD69 is a type II membrane antigen expressed by cytokine-activated, but not freshly isolated, ...
Rotman H L - - 1996
Challenge worm survival was significantly reduced when BALB/cByJ mice were vaccinated against Strongyloides stercoralis infective third stage larvae (L3) regardless of whether the challenge infections consisted of systemically migrating L3 or L3 implanted in diffusion chambers. The only cell type that increased in number in diffusion chambers in immunized mice, ...
Brandtzaeg P - - 1996
The specific defence of airway mucosae depends primarily on secretory immunity. The B cells involved are initially stimulated in organized mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue, apparently including the tonsils and adenoid. From these inductive sites, memory cells migrate to secretory effector sites where they differentiate terminally to immunoglobulin (Ig)-producing plasma cells. Locally ...
Martin L B - - 1996
For over 100 years, the eosinophil has been associated with allergic disease. At present, eosinophils appear to be associated pathologically with asthma, atopic dermatitis, allergic rhinitis, eosinophilic gastroenteritis, and certain eye diseases. The effector functions of eosinophils appear to be derived primarily from release of lipid mediators and proteins, including ...
Desreumaux P - - 1996
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Eosinophilic gastroenteritis (EG) is characterized by an eosinophilic infiltration of the gastrointestinal tract. The mechanism for the intestinal recruitment of eosinophils in EG remains unknown. Eosinophil recruitment and activation is induced by three main cytokines: interleukin (IL) 3, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), and IL-5. The aim of ...
Folkard S G - - 1996
Mice inoculated with microfilariae of the filarial nematode Onchocerca lienalis clear their parasites over a period of 3-4 months and are highly resistant to re-infection. We have investigated the comparative roles of the eosinophil, macrophage and neutrophil in effecting this parasite clearance, employing agents specifically to perturb cell function in ...
Jankowski R - - 1996
Nasal polyposis can be defined as a chronic inflammatory disease of the paranasal sinus mucosa, leading to a protrusion of benign edematous polyps from the meatus into the nasal cavities. Nasal polyps are histologically characterized by massive edema and accumulation of eosinophils. IgE-mediated allergy seems to play only a minor ...
Steerenberg P A - - 1996
It is widely accepted that humans exposed to known concentrations of ozone under controlled conditions exhibit reversible changes that affect the large and small airways as well as the alveolar region of the lung. Among the reversible changes, the induction of inflammatory responses in the lung are of major concern. ...
Gruss H-J - - 1996
Hodgkin disease (HD) is characterized by the presence of a small number (usually <1% of total tumor mass) of the typical Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg (H-RS) cells in a hyperplastic background of normal reactive lymphocytes, plasma cells, histiocytes, neutrophils, eosinophils, and stromal cells. HRS cells produce various cytokines, growth factors, and ...
Bittleman D B - - 1996
Neutrophils, eosinophils and cytokines are important in allergic airway inflammatory responses. However, it is unclear how cytokines selectively influence neutrophils versus eosinophils to migrate to an inflammatory site. The cytokines, transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1), interleukin (IL)-1alpha, IL-5, IL-8, granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), are released ...
Schwiebert L M - - 1996
We believe that there are the following four classes of glucocorticoid-sensitive cytokines that are involved in cell recruitment: (1) those that activate endothelium nonspecifically; (2) those that activate endothelium specifically; (3) those that activate, prime, and prolong the survival of eosinophils; and (4) those that stimulate movement of cells up ...
Bellibaş S E - - 1996
Eosinophils play a key role for the function of release inflammatory mediators and destroy epithelial tissue in the airway. Therefore, they have been accepted to be proinflammatory effector cells in the pathogenesis of the bronchial asthma. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of the calcitonin gene-related ...
Kikuchi Y - - 1995
Mouse CD38 has been implicated in the regulation of both B-cell proliferation and protection of B cells from irradiation-induced apoptosis. CD38 ligation on B cells by CS/2, an anti-mouse CD38 monoclonal antibody, induced proliferation, IgM secretion, and tyrosine phosphorylation of Bruton tyrosine kinase in B cells from wild-type mice. B ...
Abdelaziz M M - - 1995
Several studies have demonstrated that bronchial epithelial cells are capable of synthesizing proinflammatory cytokines that may influence eosinophil and neutrophil activity. We have cultured human bronchial epithelial cells to confluence, as explant cultures, and investigated the effect of conditioned medium from these cells on (1) the chemotaxis of eosinophils and ...
Tsuyuki S - - 1995
While considerable progress has been made in understanding the events by which eosinophils accumulate in various pathophysiological conditions, the mechanisms controlling the resolution of eosinophilic inflammation are poorly understood. In the present study, we demonstrate that lung eosinophils obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) after aerosol allergen provocation of immunized mice ...
Siegel M D - - 1995
Interleukin-5 (IL-5) plays a central role in the growth and differentiation of eosinophils and contributes to several disease states including asthma. Accumulating evidence suggests a role for cAMP as an immunomodulator; agents that increase intracellular cAMP levels have been shown to inhibit production of cytokines predominantly produced by T helper ...
Till S - - 1995
Specific eosinophil accumulation and activation within the asthmatic bronchial mucosa are thought to occur at least partly through the actions of cytokines, including interleukin (IL)-5, IL-3 and granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). Although mRNA encoding some of these cytokines has been demonstrated in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid cells and bronchial biopsies ...
Alam Rafeul - - 1995
We investigated the effect of misoprostol on allergen-induced cutaneous immediate- and late-phase allergic reactions in a double-blind placebo-controlled randomized study. Sixteen dust-mite-allergic patients received misoprostol (200 &mgr;g) or placebo and then had skin testing on two different days. The immediate- and late-phase skin response was monitored for 6 h. Skin ...
Sedgwick J B - - 1995
Eosinophils are hypothesized to be crucial in the development of allergic airway inflammation; however, the actual mechanisms that determine their inflammatory activity are still largely undefined. To investigate the factors that regulate eosinophil function in allergic airway disease, we have previously used segmental bronchoprovocation with allergen to study ex vivo ...
Kaplan A P - - 1995
The beta subfamily of chemokines contains cytokine-like factors which are chemotactic for human basophils and eosinophils. The also stimulate these cells to secrete pro-inflammatory substances such as histamine or eosinophil cationic protein. MCAF/MCP-1, MCP-2, MCP-3, RANTES and MIP-1 alpha all attract and stimulate basophils; MCP-1 and MCP-3 are the most ...
Sosman J A - - 1995
Interleukin-4 (IL-4) is a T-cell-derived cytokine that may mediate murine tumor rejection through the activation of host eosinophils. In association with a Phase I clinical trial of IL-4 in cancer patients, we have examined changes in eosinophil counts and characterized systemic eosinophil degranulation. As previously reported, IL-4 administration induced a ...
Woolley K L - - 1995
Allergen inhalation challenge is associated with increases in eosinophil number and activation, and provides a useful model for investigating airway inflammation in asthma. Limited information, however, is available on the effect of allergen challenge on cytokines regulating eosinophil function. We investigated allergen-induced changes in eosinophil number and activation and in ...
Beauvais F - - 1995
In the absence of appropriate stimulus, eosinophils in vitro rapidly exhibit the features of apoptotic cells (nuclear pycnosis, cell shrinkage, DNA fragmentation). By using electronic cell sizing, we precisely measured the volume distribution of human eosinophils during apoptosis. We observed that apoptosis of eosinophils was accompanied by a marked cell ...
Yousefi S - - 1995
Eosinophils possess the capacity to synthesize various cytokines. We demonstrate that IL-8 mRNA and protein are constitutively expressed by freshly isolated resting human eosinophils. Most of the patients with bronchial asthma or atopic dermatitis show evidence for up-regulated IL-8 protein expression in eosinophils but not in neutrophils, suggesting that an ...
Bradding P - - 1995
Allergic mucosal inflammation is characterized by tissue infiltration with eosinophils, and associated activation of mast cells and T lymphocytes. Tumour necrosis factor (TNF) alpha/cachectin is a candidate cytokine relevant to the pathogenesis of these events through its capacity to upregulate the expression of endothelial cell adhesion molecules, mediate granulocyte chemoattraction, ...
Spessotto P - - 1995
Inhibition of growth or eradication of experimentally induced tumors has been shown to be accompanied by infiltration of eosinophils and macrophages into the tumor mass. Since macrophages are important mediators of host antitumor activity, the possibility arises that a collaboration may exist between these two cell types in the control ...
Bignold L P - - 1995
Eosinophil leukocytes have been studied for over 100 years, with various theories being advanced of the mechanism of their recruitment and function, especially in relation to the lesions of allergy, asthma and parasitism. Early notions of recruitment and function depended on observations of the cells in inflammatory lesions, while later ...
Mattoli S - - 1995
RANTES is a cytokine produced by activated T-lymphocytes that has been shown to exert chemotactic activity for memory-type CD4 T-lymphocytes and eosinophils. In this study, RANTES caused directional migration of human mast cells. When compared to other potential chemoattractants of the same cells, RANTES was found to be more potent ...
Virchow J C JC - - 1995
Increasing evidence suggests a role for activated T cells and cytokines in the regulation of eosinophilic inflammation in asthma. In this study, we investigated the distribution of leukocytes, lymphocytes, their activation state, and the cytokine profile in BAL from 10 atopic asthmatics with positive skin prick tests and elevated specific ...
Beauvais F - - 1995
Azide and hydroxylamine release nitric oxide (NO) enzymatically in biological conditions. We observed that both compounds were able to inhibit in vitro the programmed cell death of human eosinophils from peripheral blood. This protective effect could be mimicked by permeable cGMP analogs and by the phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. Moreover, the ...
Yen J J - - 1995
We have established a human IL-5 (hIL-5) dependent cell line, JYTF-1, derived from TF-1 parental human erythroleukemic cells by long-term cultivation in the presence of hIL-5. The ED50 values of hIL-5 for both TF-1 and JYTF-1 cell lines remained similar. However, when cells were grown in an optimal concentration of ...
Takamoto M - - 1995
In order to elucidate the mechanisms of eosinophil differentiation, we examined the effects of combinations of interleukin 5 (IL-5) with IL-3 and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) on in vitro differentiation into eosinophils from bone marrow cells of ICR mice. When the amount of added IL-5 was kept constant, IL-3 exhibited ...
Brandtzaeg P - - 1995
Secretory immunity is central in primary defense of the airway mucosa. B cells involved in this local immune system are initially stimulated in mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue, including tonsils and adenoids, and then migrate to secretory effector sites where they become immunoglobulin (Ig)-producing plasma cells. Locally produced Ig consists mainly of ...
Yamaya H - - 1995
Local eosinophilia has been linked to the pathogenesis of the inflammatory aspect of allergic diseases. The present study found that co-injection of D10G4.1 (D10) cells, a murine Th2 clone, with conalbumin (CA) into the peritoneal cavity of AKR/J mice increased the number of peritoneal eosinophils. The accumulation of eosinophils reached ...
Kato K - - 1995
Despite normal concentrations of serum eosinophilopoietic cytokines, blood eosinophilia was noted in patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) (n = 32). Significant increase of EG2+ "activated" eosinophil numbers that are mirrored in serum eosinophil cationic protein (ECP) levels in vitro, though not always in synchrony with total eosinophil counts, was also ...
Howarth P H - - 1995
In both seasonal and perennial rhinitis there is epithelial mast cell accumulation and tissue infiltration by eosinophils. Activation of these cells can be observed by electron microscopy and by elevated levels of tryptase and eosinophil cationic protein in nasal lavage fluid. Furthermore, seasonal increases in the antigen presenting cell (Langerhans' ...
Erger R A - - 1995
Interleukin-8 (IL-8), a potent pro-inflammatory cytokine, has been shown to have chemotactic activity for neutrophils, lymphocytes, and basophils. Effects of IL-8 on eosinophil chemotaxis are unresolved. Because eosinophils accumulate at the site of allergic inflammation and may play a role in the pathogenesis of asthma, we investigated the eosinophilotactic capacity ...
Erger R A - - 1995
Eosinophils are important immune effector cells in a variety of allergic responses and inflammatory lung diseases. Bacterial products and inflammatory mediators have been implicated in inducing an influx of eosinophils into the respiratory tract subsequent to an acute inflammatory response. Therefore, to better understand the role of eosinophils in lung ...
Bihun C G - - 1995
A sequential study of lesions of the nasal cavity associated with sialodacryoadenitis virus (SDAV) infection was made in the laboratory rat. Wistar rats were intranasally inoculated with approximately 10(3) TCID50 of the coronavirus SDAV. Transverse sections of four regions of the nasal cavity from inoculated and control animals were examined ...
Friedman H - - 1995
THC, the major psychoactive component of marijuana, has been shown both in humans and experimental animals to have immunomodulatory properties. For example, marijuana smokers may show impaired immunological functions, including deficiency of blood leukocyte blastogenesis to mitogens. Detailed studies with mice have shown that animals given THC can show marked ...
Wardlaw A J - - 1994
Considerable progress has been made in our understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in eosinophil and basophil migration into sites of allergic inflammation. It is clearly a staged process, each stage offering a level of control over the cell specificity and degree of migration. On the basis of current evidence, ...
Kaufman L D - - 1994
Eosinophilia myalgia syndrome (EMS) is a toxin-induced illness that provides a model for the understanding of idiopathic immune-mediated diseases that have overlapping features. The clinical development and chronic sequelae of EMS, its relationship to related disorders, and the accumulating data suggesting an important role for immune mechanisms in the pathogenesis ...
Bittleman D B - - 1994
Cytokines are proinflammatory protein mediators produced by many cells, including mast cells, T lymphocytes, eosinophils, airway epithelial cells, and macrophages. There are numerous in vitro and in vivo animal and human studies showing that cytokines are released as a result of allergic reactions. Cytokines mediate allergic inflammation by activating eosinophils, ...
Coëffier E - - 1994
1. Platelet activating factor (PAF), leukotriene B4 (LTB4) and interleukin-5 (IL-5) are potent chemoattractants for guinea-pig eosinophils, which may be involved in eosinophil recruitment and up-regulation in allergic diseases. Eosinophils from the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) of ovalbumin-sensitized guinea-pigs were collected 24 h after antigen provocation and migration induced by ...
Guida L - - 1994
The hematopoietic growth factors interleukin-3 (IL-3), IL-5, and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) regulate the survival, maturation, and activation of eosinophils. Corticosteroids in contrast have a negative effect both on the hematopoietic process and the function of eosinophils. We have unexpectedly observed synergy between IL-5 and glucocorticoids such as dexamethasone and ...
Douglass J A - - 1994
Interleukin-8 (IL-8) is a major cytokine in the recruitment of neutrophils (polymorphonuclear leukocytes) to areas of inflammation. It also activates T lymphocytes and cytokine-primed basophils and eosinophils and therefore may be implicated as an effector in allergic inflammation. IL-8 has also been identified as a mediator in such inflammatory pulmonary ...
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