The normal myeloid hematopoietic regulatory proteins include four growth-inducing proteins called colony-stimulating factors (CSF), including interleukin-3 (IL-3), or macrophage and granulocyte inducers, type 1 (MGI-1), and another type of protein (MGI-2) with no myeloid cell growth-inducing activity that induces differentiation of normal myeloid precursor cells and certain clones of myeloid leukemic cells. An IgG2a monoclonal antibody was prepared and it neutralized two forms of MGI-2 (MGI-2A and MGI-2B) produced by mouse Krebs ascites tumor cells. The monoclonal antibody was used for affinity purification of MGI-2. This antibody also neutralized MGI-2 produced by normal mouse macrophages, normal myeloblasts incubated with IL-3, and MGI-2 produced by the lungs and found in the serum of mice injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). The anti-MGI-2 antibody did not inhibit the activity of any one of the four myeloid growth-inducing proteins (CSF or IL-3 = MGI-1), IL-1, tumor necrosis factor, or lymphotoxin. This antibody also inhibited induction of differentiation of myeloid leukemic cells by LPS, which is mediated by the endogenous production of MGI-2, but did not inhibit induction of differentiation in these leukemic cells by dexamethasone or cytosine arabinoside, which is not mediated by MGI-2. Anti-MGI-2 antibody thus inhibited differentiation when MGI-2 was added externally to cells or when it was mediated by endogenously produced MGI-2.

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