The four biochemically distinct species of human interleukin 1 all exhibit similar biologic activities.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
The supernatants of human monocytes incubated with endotoxin are able to stimulate the proliferation of murine thymocytes in the presence of PHA. This is known as LAF (lymphocyte activating factor) activity and is a characteristic activity of interleukin 1 (IL 1). The LAF activity can be resolved into four major fractions: a 15,000 dalton (pI 7), a 15,000 (pI 5.5), a 35,000 (pI 7), and a 35,000 (pI 5.5) fraction. To determine whether these four fractions shared the other biologic activities ascribed to IL 1, they were compared in a series of bioassays. When standardized with respect to their LAF activities, the four fractions did not differ significantly as mitogens for murine thymocytes, inducers of IL 2, murine or human B cell activators, human chondrocyte or synoviocyte stimulants, or inducers of acute phase proteins in vivo. On the other hand, the samples differed markedly as stimulators of porcine synoviocytes, with the 15,000 dalton (pI 5.5) fraction being the only strongly active fraction. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that all four LAF could be products of a single gene, although the porcine receptor may be able to distinguish between them. If this is the case, all four fractions can properly be termed IL 1.