The Department of Genetic Medicine at Weill Cornell leads a dynamic and innovative translational research program, advancing diverse fields such as Genetic Therapy and Personalized Medicine.
Our translational research program aims to leverage our expertise in genetic therapies and personalized medicine to develop clinical solutions that target the molecular causes of human diseases.
The Department of Genetic Medicine advances treatments and diagnostics through diverse clinical trials, including drug testing and research to better understand diseases.
The Department of Genetic Medicine at Weill Cornell leads a dynamic and innovative translational research program, advancing diverse fields such as Genetic Therapy and Personalized Medicine.
Our translational research program aims to leverage our expertise in genetic therapies and personalized medicine to develop clinical solutions that target the molecular causes of human diseases.
The Department of Genetic Medicine advances treatments and diagnostics through diverse clinical trials, including drug testing and research to better understand diseases.
Evaluation of alveolar macrophages in normals and individuals with active pulmonary sarcoidosis for the spontaneous expression of the interleukin-1 beta gene.
Publication Type
Academic Article
Authors
Wewers M, Saltini C, Sellers S, Tocci M, Bayne E, Schmidt J, Crystal R
We have evaluated the hypothesis that the presence of large numbers of activated helper/inducer T lymphocytes in the lungs of individuals with active pulmonary sarcoidosis is associated with the exaggerated release of interleukin-1 (IL-1) by alveolar macrophages. Evaluation of media from unstimulated cultured sarcoid alveolar macrophages failed to detect IL-1 activity. When parallel cultures of sarcoid and normal alveolar macrophages were stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS), they released similar amounts of IL-1 activity. Using a highly specific polyclonal anti-IL-1 beta antibody and flow cytometry to evaluate cell-associated IL-1 beta, analysis of fresh alveolar macrophages from patients with active sarcoidosis and normal individuals revealed no detectable cell-associated IL-1 beta, but IL-1 beta was present when macrophages from sarcoid patients and normals were stimulated with LPS. Similar observations were made using immunoblot analysis of cell lysates of the same unstimulated and stimulated macrophages. Finally, Northern analysis of alveolar macrophages for IL-1 beta mRNA transcripts demonstrated minimal, but equivalent, amounts of IL-1 beta in both normal and sarcoid macrophages, as compared to the much larger quantities present in LPS-stimulated alveolar macrophages. Thus, while alveolar macrophages of individuals with sarcoidosis are clearly capable of expressing the IL-1 beta gene, these findings suggest that altered expression of the IL-1 beta gene by alveolar macrophages does not play a central role in the exaggerated lung T-cell activation characteristic of sarcoidosis.