Volume 17, Issue 5 pp. 593-598
Article
Full Access

Constitutive production of B cell differentiation factor-like activity by human T and B cell lines

Susan Kanowith-Klein

Corresponding Author

Susan Kanowith-Klein

Department of Medicine, Division of Clinical Immunology and Allergy

Department of Microbiology and Immunology, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90024, USASearch for more papers by this author
Andrew Saxon

Andrew Saxon

Department of Medicine, Division of Clinical Immunology and Allergy

Search for more papers by this author
Christel H. Uittenbogaart

Christel H. Uittenbogaart

Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of California, Los Angeles

Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California, Los Angeles

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 1987
Citations: 7

Abstract

A lymphokine demonstrating human B cell differentiation factor (BCDF)-like activity was isolated from immature (MOLT-4f, CCRF-CEM and CCRF-HSDB-2) and mature (HUT-78) malignant human T lymphoid cell lines and from human B lymphoblastoid cell lines (BJAB and ALL-7031-B). All the cell lines were grown long term in serum-free medium. This BCDF-like activity has a molecular mass in the range of 40–60 kDa and stimulates immunoglobulin synthesis of cell lines capable of producing IgA (GM-1056), IgG (GM-1500 and CESS) and IgM (CBL#3). It was not produced by a myeloid cell line. We were only able to identify the differentiation activity produced by the T and B cell lines by using appropriate molecular mass fractions from the serum-free medium as controls. This BCDF-like activity is different from that of the human BCDF so far described as it has a higher molecular mass and is constitutively produced by malignant T lymphoid cell lines which are human T cell leukemia virus-I negative and by B lymphoblastoid cell lines.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.