Because of the recent finding that interleukin-5 (IL-5) is produced by Epstein-Barr virus-transformed B lymphocytes (EBV-B cells), we performed studies to ascertain whether EBV-B cells might use IL-5 by an autocrine mechanism. EBV-B cells known to be IL-5 producers were capable of responding to addition of exogenous IL-5 by dose-related augmented proliferation. The addition of a neutralizing anti-IL-5 antibody reduced these effects and also dose-dependently inhibited proliferation and reduced viability of unsupplemented EBV-B cells, having a maximum effect at about 120 hours. In contrast, no stimulatory effect of IL-5 was noted on Burkitt's lymphoma cell lines, nor were these lines growth-inhibited by anti-IL-5 antibody. With biotinylated IL-5, (b-IL-5) second labeling with streptavidin-FITC, and flow cytometric analysis, binding of IL-5 to EBV-B cells cultured in fresh medium was demonstrated and could be competed for by excess unlabeled IL-5, suggesting the presence of IL-5-specific binding sites. Binding of IL-5 was reduced on cells cultured for longer periods before study but could be restored by extensively washing cells before labeling them with b-IL-5, suggesting that surface binding sites had become occupied by endogenously produced IL-5. These findings support a role for IL-5 in autocrine support of EBV-B cell growth.

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