Transferrin (Tf) plays an important role during immunologic activation by donating iron to activated lymphocytes. Therefore, synthesis by lymphomyeloid cells has been investigated. Mouse macrophages and macrophage cell lines synthesized Tf, with levels being markedly increased by gamma-interferon (gamma-IFN) and, to a lesser extent, by interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), IL-6, and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha). Tf was also produced by phytohemagglutinin-stimulated human T cells and two T-cell lines and was increased by IL-2. Even after appropriate activation, none was synthesized by human macrophages or monocytic cell lines or by mouse T cells, T-cell lines, or thymus cells. In both species, B-lineage cell lines were negative. Tf was also synthesised by macrophages from congenitally hypotransferrinemic mice and was responsive to gamma-IFN, but levels were lower than those from normal controls. Synthesis by human and murine hepatoma cells was increased by IL-6 but unaffected by IL-1, TNF alpha, or gamma-IFN. Iron decreased synthesis by hepatoma cells but had no effect on the lymphomyeloid cells. Tf mRNA levels paralleled protein synthesis, suggesting that regulation was pre-translational. Thus, Tf synthesis by lymphomyeloid cells is regulated differently from hepatic synthesis, which is consistent with the suggestion that Tf may act in a paracrine (mouse) or autocrine (human) manner on activated lymphocytes.

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