Surface staining and cytotoxic activity of heat-shock protein 60 antibody in stressed aortic endothelial cells.

Abstract
Heat-shock protein (hsp) expression can be induced by high temperature, exposure to cytokines or oxygen radicals, ischemia, hemodynamic overload, or viral infections. To determine whether surface expression of hsp60 occurs in aortic endothelial cells stressed by high temperature or cytokines, cells from rat aortas were cultivated and stained with several types of monoclonal antibodies against hsp60. Other antibodies, eg, those against intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), or immune response-associated antigens were also used as controls. Positive staining of endothelial cells on the surface and in the cytoplasm was observed after pretreatment of the cells with cytokine-containing medium, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), or interleukin-1 alpha and labeling with a specific monoclonal antibody against hsp60 (II-13). Fluorescence-activated cell sorter analyses showed that over 80% of living endothelial cells stressed by cytokine-containing medium, by TNF-alpha, or at 42 degrees C, but not by int...