Distribution and comparison of receptors for leukemia inhibitory factor on murine hemopoietic and hepatic cells

Abstract
Leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) is a glycoprotein that induces the differentiation of the monocytic leukemia cell line M1 but suppresses the differentiation of totipotent embryonic stem cells. In an attempt to define the normal cellular targets for LIF, the distribution of LIF receptors within hemopoietic and hepatic tissue was analyzed by binding cells with radioiodinated LIF (125I‐LIF) and subsequently carrying out autoradiography. Autoradiography demonstrated that in each he‐mopoietic tissue examined cells of monocyte/macrophage lineage were the primary cell type labeled with 125I‐LIF. Moreover, both fetal and adult parenchy‐mal hepatocytes displayed higher levels of labeling than either monocytes or macrophages. The number of receptors per positive cell varied from 150 for bone marrow monocytes to 2,000 for adult hepatocytes. In each case, however, binding was of high affinity, with an apparent KD of 34–100 pM, and binding was specific, since labeling was competed for by unlabeled LIF but not a range of other structurally unrelated growth and differentiation factors. It is suggested that LIF may play a role in regulating macrophage function and hepatic acute phase protein synthesis in response to infection.

This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit: