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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, Jul 1996, 464-469, Vol 3, No. 4
KD Fairchild, RG Hudson, SD Douglas, SE McKenzie and RA Polin
Fc gamma receptors provide an essential link between cellular and humoral
immunity, and little is known about their expression in monocytes of
newborn infants. We compared baseline and gamma interferon
(IFN-gamma)-induced expression of Fc gamma RI and Fc gamma RII protein and
Fc gamma RI mRNA in monocytes from healthy, term infants and adults.
Fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis demonstrated that baseline
expression of monocyte Fc gamma RI in newborn infants was not significantly
different from that in adults, while Fc gamma RII protein expression in
monocytes derived from newborns was significantly higher than that for
adults (mean channel fluorescence [MCF] for newborns and adults, 5.53 and
4.50, respectively [P = 0.039]). In vitro treatment with recombinant
IFN-gamma increased the expression of Fc gamma RI in monocytes of newborns
and adults to the same extent (2.4- and 2.2-fold increase in MCF in
newborns and adults, respectively, at 42 h). We developed a
semiquantitative fluorescence reverse transcriptase PCR which demonstrated
a significant increase in mRNA for Fc gamma RI in monocytes of newborns and
adults with in vitro IFN-gamma exposure, indicating that IFN-gamma acts by
increasing the transcription or transcript stability of Fc gamma RI mRNA.
While there was no significant effect of IFN-gamma treatment on Fc gamma
RII expression in monocytes from adults, there was a 20% increase in Fc
gamma RII in monocytes from newborns (P = 0.009). Monocytes from healthy,
term newborns and adults exhibit comparable baseline and IFN-gamma-induced
levels of expression of Fc gamma RI and higher baseline and IFN-gamma-
induced levels of expression of Fc gamma RII.
Copyright © 1996 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Effect of gamma interferon on expression of Fc gamma receptors in monocytes of newborn infants and adults
Division of Neonatology, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA.
| Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. | Clin. Microbiol. Rev. | Infect. Immun. |
|---|---|---|
| J. Clin. Microbiol. | J. Virol. | ALL ASM JOURNALS |