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  • Title: Decreased monocyte-mediated angiogenesis in scleroderma.
    Author: Koch AE, Litvak MA, Burrows JC, Polverini PJ.
    Journal: Clin Immunol Immunopathol; 1992 Aug; 64(2):153-60. PubMed ID: 1379528.
    Abstract:
    Scleroderma is a disease characterized by proliferative vascular lesions in which monocytes/macrophages may play a key role. Monocytes were isolated from 14 scleroderma patients and 11 normal controls and cultured with or without lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (5 micrograms/ml). Monocyte-conditioned medium was assayed in the rat corneal bioassay for angiogenesis. Conditioned medium from normal monocytes was nonangiogenic, as was conditioned medium from scleroderma monocytes. While conditioned medium from LPS-activated normal monocytes was potently angiogenic in 11/13 corneas, conditioned medium from LPS-activated scleroderma monocytes was angiogenic in only 3/14 corneas. Levels of the angiogenic cytokine tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) were measured in conditioned medium from scleroderma and normal monocytes. TNF-alpha levels were not significantly different in patient and control groups and thus do not account for the decreased angiogenic activity exhibited by scleroderma monocytes. As monocytes require activation to produce angiogenic activity, we determined the cell surface binding of monoclonal antibodies to activation-related (HLA-DR, 3D8, and 8D7) and other (Leu-M5) markers on monocytes by radioimmunoassay. Monocytes were cultured alone, with LPS (5 micrograms/ml), or with interferon-gamma (IFN) (200 units/ml). The usual increase in binding of anti-HLA-DR on stimulation of scleroderma monocytes with IFN was slightly less than that of controls. IFN-stimulated monocytes bound less anti-8D7 than controls. Anti-3D8 and anti-Leu-M5 binding was comparable in both groups. These results suggest that scleroderma monocytes do not produce normal levels of angiogenic activity with LPS stimulation, have some altered markers of activation on their cell surfaces, and may thus contribute to the aberrant vascular proliferation found in this disease.
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