Epidermal cell (keratinocyte)-derived thymocyte-activating factor (ETAF).

Abstract
In order to determine whether keratinocytes play a role in the modulation of the immune response, we investigated the murine keratinocyte cell line Pam 212. In culture these cells generate a substance with a biologic activity that greatly enhances phytohemagglutinin-induced thymocyte proliferation. We have, therefore, called this substance epidermal cell thymocyte-activating factor (ETAF). This keratinocyte-derived supernatant activity is mainly produced at the onset of the logarithmic growth phase and is directly mitogenic for murine thymocytes. Although ETAF by itself exhibits no T cell growth factor activity, ETAF enhances Interleukin 2 production by mitogen-stimulated murine spleen cells. Murine ETAF is not genetically restricted and lacks species specificity since it decreases lectin-induced proliferation of human peripheral blood lymphocytes (as well as murine spleen cells) and also enhances the production of human Interleukin 2. The factor has a m.w. between 15,000 and 25,000 as determined by gel filtration and elutes as a single peak from anion exchange chromatography columns. The activity is maintained mainly at alkaline pH and is rapidly destroyed at temperatures above 60 degrees C. These observations suggest that epidermal cells may interact with the immune system by elaborating nonspecific factors that modulate lymphocyte proliferation and augment lymphokine production.

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