Abstract
The present study was an attempt to elucidate the effect of estrogenic xenobiotics on the proliferation of mitogen-stimulated human peripheral blood lymphocyte (PBL). Our findings follow: (a) the proliferation of PBL in response to phytohemagglutinin (PHA) was mediated by protein kinase C activity, but estrogenic xenobiotics had a strong inhibitory effect on protein kinase C activity of PHA-stimulated PBL; (b) cytoplasmic extracts from PHA-stimulated PBL greatly activated DNA replication, but estrogenic xenobiotics had a strong inhibitory effect on these activities. The results suggest that the cytoplasmic signal-generating system in mitogen-treated PBL is inhibited by estrogenic xenobiotics, and that the defect occurs at all stages in the sequence of events leading to DNA synthesis and cell proliferation.
Original language | American English |
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Journal | International journal of immunopharmacology |
Volume | 20 |
State | Published - Jan 1 1998 |
Keywords
- Adult
- Cells
- Cultured
- Estradiol
- Estradiol Congeners
- Estrogenic xenobiotics
- Female
- Humans
- Lymphocytes
- Mitogen-response
- Peripheral blood lymphocytes
- Signal Transduction
- Xenobiotics
- cell proliferation
- dna replication
- dna synthesis
- lymphocyte activation
- lymphocyte proliferation
- phytohemagglutinin
- priority journal
- protein kinase c
- review
- xenobiotic agent
Disciplines
- Life Sciences