Immunolocalization of CD34 in Nasal Polyposis

Similar documents
Allergen-induced Increases in Sputum Levels of Group 2 Innate Lymphoid Cells. Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou, China.

Flow Cytometry. What is flow cytometry?

G. M. GAUVREAU, L. J. WOOD, R. SEHMI, R. M. WATSON, S. C. DORMAN, R. P. SCHLEIMER, J. A. DENBURG, and P. M. O BYRNE

Immunology of Asthma. Kenneth J. Goodrum,Ph. Ph.D. Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine

Basophil and eosinophil differentiation in allergic reactions

Impact of Asthma in the U.S. per Year. Asthma Epidemiology and Pathophysiology. Risk Factors for Asthma. Childhood Asthma Costs of Asthma

Monocyte subsets in health and disease. Marion Frankenberger

CD34/QBEND10 Immunostaining in the Bone Marrow Trephine Biopsy. A Study of CD34-Positive Mononuclear Cells and Megakaryocytes

Allergen-induced Increases in IL-5 Receptor -subunit Expression on Bone Marrow derived CD34 Cells from Asthmatic Subjects

E-1 Role of IgE and IgE receptors in allergic airway inflammation and remodeling

Defining Asthma: Clinical Criteria. Defining Asthma: Bronchial Hyperresponsiveness

Gladstone Institutes, University of California (UCSF), San Francisco, USA

Effect of Interleukin 10 on the Hematopoietic Progenitor Cells from Patients with Aplastic Anemia

Flow Cytometry. Hanan Jafar (2017)

Cytokines modulate the functional activities of individual cells and tissues both under normal and pathologic conditions Interleukins,

Mouse Anti-OVA IgM Antibody Assay Kit

CD34+ Cells: A Comparison of Stem and Progenitor Cells in Cord Blood, Peripheral Blood, and the Bone Marrow

Grass pollen immunotherapy induces Foxp3 expressing CD4 + CD25 + cells. in the nasal mucosa. Suzana Radulovic MD, Mikila R Jacobson PhD,

Question 1. Kupffer cells, microglial cells and osteoclasts are all examples of what type of immune system cell?

Development of Natural Killer Cells from Lymphohematopoietic Progenitors of Murine Fetal Liver

Suppl Video: Tumor cells (green) and monocytes (white) are seeded on a confluent endothelial

Supplementary Figure 1. Characterization of basophils after reconstitution of SCID mice

Defining Asthma: Clinical Criteria. Defining Asthma: Bronchial Hyperresponsiveness

Defining Asthma: Bronchial Hyperresponsiveness. Defining Asthma: Clinical Criteria. Impaired Ventilation in Asthma. Dynamic Imaging of Asthma

ACTIVATION AND EFFECTOR FUNCTIONS OF CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNITY AND NK CELLS. Choompone Sakonwasun, MD (Hons), FRCPT

Supplemental Table 1. Primer sequences for transcript analysis

colorimetric sandwich ELISA kit datasheet

LIST OF ORGANS FOR HISTOPATHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS:!! Neural!!!!!!Respiratory:! Brain : Cerebrum,!!! Lungs and trachea! Olfactory, Cerebellum!!!!Other:!

In vitro human regulatory T cell expansion

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. Involvement of IL-21 in the epidermal hyperplasia of psoriasis

Ex vivo Human Antigen-specific T Cell Proliferation and Degranulation Willemijn Hobo 1, Wieger Norde 1 and Harry Dolstra 2*

Airway Inflammation in Asthma Chih-Yung Chiu 1,2, Kin-Sun Wong 2 1 Department of Pediatrics, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Keelung, Taiwan.

In vitro human regulatory T cell expansion

Supplementary Figures

Hematopoiesis. Hematopoiesis. Hematopoiesis

feature articles Reviews and

METHODS Penh. Measurements and ribonuclease protection assay. Intracellular cytokine staining. ELISAs RT-PCR. Lung morphometry.

Induced sputum to assess airway inflammation: a study of reproducibility

Dr Rodney Itaki Lecturer Division of Pathology Anatomical Pathology Discipline

Mouse Total IgA Antibody Detection Kit

THE INFLUENCE OF SODIUM FLUORIDE ON THE CLONOGENECITY OF HUMAN HEMATOPOIETIC PROGENITOR CELLS: PRELIMINARY REPORT

Copyright 2008 The Authors. Deposited on: 30 January 2015

The system Fas/Fas-L in SLE

McAb and rhil-2 activated bone marrow on the killing and purging of leukemia cells

Detailed step-by-step operating procedures for NK cell and CTL degranulation assays

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. CXCR4 inhibitors could benefit to HER2 but not to Triple-Negative. breast cancer patients

Nature Immunology: doi: /ni.3412

Instructions for Use. APO-AB Annexin V-Biotin Apoptosis Detection Kit 100 tests

MATERIALS AND METHODS. Neutralizing antibodies specific to mouse Dll1, Dll4, J1 and J2 were prepared as described. 1,2 All

Hematopoiesis. BHS Liège 27/1/2012. Dr Sonet Anne UCL Mont-Godinne

In vitro human regulatory T cell suppression assay

Neutrophils contribute to fracture healing by synthesizing fibronectin+ extracellular matrix rapidly after injury

Role of Tyk-2 in Th9 and Th17 cells in allergic asthma

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Lymphoid System: cells of the immune system. Answer Sheet

Interferon γ regulates idiopathic pneumonia syndrome, a. Th17 + CD4 + T-cell-mediated GvH disease

4. TEXTBOOK: ABUL K. ABBAS. ANDREW H. LICHTMAN. CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR IMMUNOLOGY. 5 TH EDITION. Chapter 2. pg

Product Datasheet. HLA ABC Antibody (W6/32) NB Unit Size: 0.25 mg. Store at -20C. Avoid freeze-thaw cycles. Reviews: 1 Publications: 22

Supplementary Figure 1. H-PGDS deficiency does not affect GI tract functions and anaphylactic reaction. (a) Representative pictures of H&E-stained

10.00 PBS OVA OVA+isotype antibody 8.00 OVA+anti-HMGB1. PBS Methatroline (mg/ml)

Supporting Information

Allergic rhinitis (Hay fever) Asthma Anaphylaxis Urticaria Atopic dermatitis

Phenotypes of asthma; implications for treatment. Medical Grand Rounds Feb 2018 Jim Martin MD DSc

Effector T Cells and

Searching for Targets to Control Asthma

Rapid antigen-specific T cell enrichment (Rapid ARTE)

Direct ex vivo characterization of human antigen-specific CD154 + CD4 + T cells Rapid antigen-reactive T cell enrichment (Rapid ARTE)

Figure S1. PMVs from THP-1 cells expose phosphatidylserine and carry actin. A) Flow

Comparative Study of Nasal Smear and Biopsy in Patients of Allergic Rhinitis

Molecular and Cellular Basis of Immune Protection of Mucosal Surfaces

COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL. Definition and Pathology CHAPTER 1. John Rees

GSI Canine IL-5 ELISA Kit-2 Plates DataSheet

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Supplemental figure 1. PDGFRα is expressed dominantly by stromal cells surrounding mammary ducts and alveoli. A) IHC staining of PDGFRα in

Explain the laboratory diagnosis of Rabies?

Differentiation Ability of Peripheral Blood Cells from Patients with Acute Leukemia or Blast Crisis in Chronic Myelocytic Leukemia"

Measuring Dendritic Cells

Cytokines, adhesion molecules and apoptosis markers. A comprehensive product line for human and veterinary ELISAs

DNA vaccine, peripheral T-cell tolerance modulation 185

BCR-ABL - LSK BCR-ABL + LKS - (%)

Detection of small numbers of immature cells in the blood of healthy subjects

Generation of monocytederived Dendritic Cells (modcs)

Ultrastructural Study of Human Natural Killer CNK) Cell*)

DISCOVERING ATCC IMMUNOLOGICAL CELLS - MODEL SYSTEMS TO STUDY THE IMMUNE AND CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS

NEUTROPHIL, BASOPHIL, EOSINOPHIL, AND PLATELETS SURFACE RECEPTORS

Immunology of Asthma. Kenneth J. Goodrum,Ph. Ph.D. Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine

Technical Resources. BD Immunocytometry Systems. FastImmune Intracellular Cytokine Staining Procedures

CHAPTER 3 LABORATORY PROCEDURES

IKKα Causes Chromatin Modification on Pro-Inflammatory Genes by Cigarette Smoke in Mouse Lung

DC were seeded into tissue culture dishes in IMDM 2% FCS, and added with PMN. (1:1; PMN: DC) for 16h also in the presence of DNAse (100 U/ml); DC were

Mast Cells. in the brain

Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cell Manual

Supplemental Experimental Procedures

SUPPLEMENTARY METHODS

Rapid Flow Cytometry Method for Quantitation of LFA-1-Adhesive T Cells

Identifying Biologic Targets to Attenuate or Eliminate Asthma Exacerbations

ImageStream cytometer analysis. Cells were cultured as described above in vented-cap

Vasculitis local: systemic

Bead Based Assays for Cytokine Detection

Exhaled Nitric Oxide: An Adjunctive Tool in the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma

Transcription:

Immunolocalization of CD34 in Nasal Polyposis Effect of Topical Corticosteroids Young-Ki Kim,* Masashi Uno,* Daniel L. Hamilos, Lisa Beck, Bruce Bochner, Robert Schleimer, and Judah A. Denburg Department of Otolaryngology, Inje University, Seoul, Korea; Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri; and Johns Hopkins Allergy and Asthma Research Center, Baltimore, Maryland Airway inflammation in patients with nasal polyps is characterized by the increased presence of eosinophils, the numbers of which are reduced after treatment with topical corticosteroids. Because eosinophilic responses in the airways are in part due to eosinophil progenitor differentiation, we hypothesized that CD34, a cell surface, sialomucinlike glycoprotein that specifically marks hemopoietic progenitors and endothelium, would be expressed in nasal polyp tissue. We sought to identify CD34 leukocytes or endothelial cells in nasal polyps. We also investigated the effect of the topical corticosteroid budesonide on the numbers of CD34 cells and vessels in nasal polyps. To accomplish this, we performed immunostaining for CD34 protein in tissue sections of nasal polyps from topical steroid-treated and -untreated groups of patients, as well as from one patient before and after systemic corticosteroid therapy. We also examined myeloid colony formation by isolated polyp mononuclear cells, and performed flow cytometry to detect the presence of CD34 /CD45 cells within these isolated populations. We also examined the in vitro effects of steroids on human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) expression of CD34. We detected CD34-immunoreactive mononuclear cells and blood vessels in the lamina propria of all nasal polyps. CD34 mononuclear cells resembled immature hemopoietic cells morphologically. Mononuclear cell fractions from polyps contained myeloid colony-forming cells and cells bearing CD45, a pan-leukocyte marker, as well as CD34, and gated as true hemopoietic blast cells. The numbers of CD34 cells and CD34 vessels in steroid-treated nasal polyps were significantly higher than in steroid-untreated nasal polyps (15.67 2.08 cells/10 hpf, versus 5.33 1.36 cells/10 hpf, P 0.002; 101.25 6.24 vessels/0.5 mm 2 of lamina propria, versus 57.22 8.00 vessels/0.5 mm 2 of lamina propria, P 0.0008, respectively). A similar upregulation of CD34 immunostaining, especially for mononuclear cells, was observed in one patient after systemic corticosteroid therapy. Steroid treatment in vitro of HUVECs did not result in enhanced CD34 expression. Both CD34 /CD45 mononuclear cells and CD34 endothelial cells are present within nasal polyps, with higher numbers in patients who have received topical corticosteroid treatment. Because enhancement of CD34 expression was not seen in cultured umbilical vein endothelial cells treated in vitro with corticosteroid, the findings of the study suggest that in nasal polyp tissue, steroids enhance numbers of CD34 progenitors and endothelial cells via indirect mechanisms. Kim, Y.-K., M. Uno, D. L. Hamilos, L. Beck, B. Bochner, R. Schleimer, and J. A. Denburg. 1999. Immunolocalization of CD34 in nasal polyposis: effect of topical corticosteroids. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol. 20:388 397. (Received in original form June 17, 1997 and in revised form June 17, 1998) *Drs. Kim and Uno contributed equally to this manuscript. Address correspondence to: Judah A. Denburg, M.D., FRCPC, Professor, Department of Medicine, McMaster University Medical Center, HSC 3V46, 1200 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON, L8N 3Z5, Canada. E-mail: denburg@fhs.mcmaster.ca Abbreviations: antibody, Ab; fluorescein isothiocyanate, FITC; high power field, hpf; human umbilical vein endothelial cell, HUVEC; immunoglobulin, Ig; interleukin-5, IL-5; mononuclear cells, MNC; nonadherent mononuclear cells, NAMNC; phycoerythrin, PE; linear side light scatter, SSC; tumor necrosis factor-, TNF- ; von Willebrand factor, VWF. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol. Vol. 20, pp. 388 397, 1999 Internet address: www.atsjournals.org Airway inflammation is an important feature of asthma and nasal polyps. Airway inflammation in patients with asthma and nasal polyps is characterized by the increased presence of several cell types, including mast cells, lymphocytes, and, in particular, eosinophils (1). Mast cells and eosinophils found in the nasal mucosa of patients with allergic rhinitis can vary in number in nasal epithelial scrapings in relation to disease severity, but in polyp scrapings a high number of metachromatic cells and eosinophils is invariably found, regardless of allergic or nonallergic status. Recently, several findings have highlighted the role of inflammatory-cell progenitors in contributing to airway in-

Kim, Uno, Hamilos, et al.: CD34 in Nasal Polyposis 389 flammation in asthma. One of these is the presence of circulating colony forming units (cfus) for eosinophils/ basophils in increased numbers in the blood of allergic individuals (2, 3); these numbers fluctuate in relation to exacerbation and resolution of clinical asthma (2), and are increased after allergen inhalation in association with the development of airway hyperresponsiveness (4). Increases in peripheral blood and bone marrow inflammatory-cell progenitors in response to allergen inhalation challenge presumably contribute to the accumulation of mature inflammatory cells in the airways of asthmatic subjects, through enhanced production and release of these progenitors by the bone marrow (5 7). CD34 is a cell surface, sialomucin-like glycoprotein that is expressed on hemopoietic progenitor cells, normal vascular endothelium, and fibroblasts. CD34 is expressed most strongly on primitive hemopoietic cells, and is progressively lost as cells differentiate (8); small numbers of these primitive, CD34 hemopoietic progenitors are found in normal human peripheral blood (9). Eosinophil/basophil progenitors circulate in human peripheral blood as a subpopulation of progenitors, identifiable as cells that form tight eosinophil-type colonies in methylcellulose, or as CD34 cells responsive to interleukin (IL)-5 or which bear IL-5 receptors (6, 7, 10). The development of a sustained tissue eosinophilia may thus be hypothesized to occur via an increase in the production and delivery of these progenitor cells that circulate in the peripheral blood, especially of atopic individuals (2 4, 11); eosinophil/basophil progenitors identified by colony assays have also been isolated from nasal polyp tissues (12). Hemopoietic colonystimulating activity for eosinophil/basophil cfus can be derived from epithelial cells or fibroblasts of nasal polyps (11, 12); these structural cells of the polyp can produce a variety of hemopoietic cytokines, including stem cell factor (13), which can stimulate CD34 cells to evolve to mast cells (13, 14). Indeed, numbers of mast cell progenitors also fluctuate in response to viral (15) or parasitic (16) stimuli associated with mast cell hyperplasia in rodents. We hypothesized that CD34 cell progenitors could be localized within the inflamed airway, and specifically within nasal polyps. To examine this, we performed immunostaining for CD34 in tissue from nasal polyps. Because glucocorticoids are known to diminish the number of mature eosinophils at sites of allergic disease in the mucosa, we also investigated the effect of the topical corticosteroid budesonide on CD34 immunoreactivity in nasal polyps, using a monoclonal antibody (Ab) directed against a major epitope of CD34. Materials and Methods Subjects Nasal polyps were obtained from 21 patients who underwent surgery for nasal obstruction. Nine patients (eight males and one female, aged 49.4 21.1 yr [mean SD]) had not taken systemic or topical corticosteroids during the 1 mo before surgery. Twelve patients (10 males and two females, aged 48.3 16.4 yr) had received the topical nasal corticosteroid budesonide at 200 to 400 g/d during the preceding month. There were no differences between the two groups in severity of presenting symptoms prior to therapy. All patients were referred to the Ear, Nose, Throat Clinic at McMaster Hospital for polypectomy, which was done under topical or general anesthesia. No patients had taken antibiotics during the month before surgery. The studies done on the patients conformed to guidelines for human experimentation and were approved by the Ethics Committee of Chedoke-McMaster and Hamilton Civic Hospitals; when appropriate, subjects provided written informed consent. In addition, we obtained nasal polyp tissue by biopsy from one patient both before and after treatment with corticosteroid. The patient s nasal passages were decongested with 0.5% phenylephrine (Neosynephrine), and were then sprayed with 4% xylocaine solution to anesthetize the nasal mucosa. Percutaneous 2 3-mm biopsy sections of nasal polyps were obtained with 5-mm Thru-Cut (Smith & Nephew, Memphis, TN) biopsy forceps. This procedure was done before and 1 wk after treatment with tapering doses (24 mg initially, decreasing by 8 mg daily to discontinuation) of methylprednisolone given orally. This study was approved by the Human Subjects Committee of the Washington University School of Medicine. Immunohistochemical Localization of CD34 in Nasal Polyps To examine cellular localization of CD34 within nasal polyps in relation to therapy, nasal polyp tissue sections of 5-mm thickness were fixed in formalin for 3 h. The tissues were embedded in paraffin, and serial sections (10 m) were cut and placed onto slides coated with 3-aminopropyltrietoxysilane (APTEX) (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO). Sections were stained through a modification of the avidin biotin complex (ABC) method (Histostatin-SP kit; Zymed Laboratories Inc., San Francisco, CA), as described previously (17). Sections stained for CD34 were trypsinized before staining for 30 min. Negative controls without primary Ab were processed in parallel. Sections were also stained for von Willebrand factor (VWF), a marker widely used for identifying endothelium in routinely processed tissue (18). To demonstrate VWF on vascular endothelia, a purified mouse monoclonal antihuman VWF Ab (PharMingen, Mississauga, ON, Canada) was used at 1:63 dilution. Mouse monoclonal antihuman CD34 Ab (QBEND/10; Novocastra Laboratories Ltd., Newcastle, UK), the isotype of which was immunoglobulin (Ig)G 1, was used at a dilution of 1:100 to detect CD34 protein in nasal polyps. Biotinylated goat antimouse Ab (Sigma) was used as a second Ab at a dilution of 1:200. Peroxidase-conjugated avidin was used at a dilution of 1:500. The QBEND/10 monoclonal Ab for CD34, the monoclonal antihuman VWF Ab, biotinylated goat antimouse IgG, streptavidin peroxidase, and the chromogenic substrate 3-amino-9-ethylcarbazole were sequentially applied to the sections. Mouse IgG 1 myeloma protein (Sigma) was used as a negative control. After immunostaining, the slides were counterstained with Mayer s hematoxylin (Sigma). Paraffin-embedded nasal tissues, prepared from biopsy samples fixed in Carnoy s solution, were stained with chromotrope 2R (Sigma) for 10 min to enumerate eosinophils. The number of eosinophils was averaged from a total of 10 fields in lamina propria.

390 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY VOL. 20 1999 Quantification of Immunohistochemical Staining All tissue samples were coded and sections were counted blindly with a conventional microscope. Quantification of staining in the paraffin-embedded nasal polyp samples was done in a region extending 0.5 mm in depth from the lower border of the basal membrane, using a calibrated eyepiece ( 10) and an objective lens with a magnification of 40 for each tissue ( 400 magnification). The number of stained endothelia was determined in an area of 0.5 mm 2 of this region. In the cytocentrifuged isolated mononuclear cell (MNC) samples, percent positivity for CD34 staining was evaluated as a percentage given by the numbers of the positive cells divided by the numbers of MNC at 400 magnification. The mean numbers of labeled cells were calculated from a total of 10 high power fields (hpf) in this area. Cell Isolation and Methylcellulose Cultures Nasal polyps were cut into pieces, which were incubated with stirring for two 60-min periods in 40 ml of McCoy s 5A medium (ph 7.2; 290 mosm/kg) supplemented with 15% fetal calf serum (FCS), 1% penicillin streptomycin, and 0.5 M 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME), containing 190 U/ ml of collagenase. The supernatants were filtered through a mesh stainless-steel sieve after a further 60-min incubation, and were pooled. The remaining tissue was incubated overnight at room temperature. The three harvested cell suspensions were centrifuged at 200 g for 10 min, and were resuspended in supplemented McCoy s 5A medium. The layer of MNC was isolated from the cell suspensions by sedimentation on Percoll density gradients (1.077 g/ml) and was placed onto 100 200 mm tissue culture dishes (Falcon Plastics, Oxnard, CA) that had been coated with collagen (Collagen Biomaterials, Palo Alto, CA), and was incubated in supplemented McCoy s 5A medium for more than 8 h at 37 C in 5% CO 2. To confirm myeloid colony formation, nonadherent mononuclear cells (NAMNC) were cultured in methylcellulose as described (2, 3, 12). NAMNC were cultured for 9 d at 37 C in 5% CO 2 at 3 10 5 cells/ml (1.5 10 5 cells per well of 24-well tissue culture plates; Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark) in Iscove s modified Dulbecco s medium (GIBCO, Grand Island, NY) with 15% FCS, 1% penicillin streptomycin, and 0.5 M 2-ME in 0.9% methylcellulose, in the presence of 10 ng/ml of recombinant human granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhgm-csf). Cells in Day 7 granulocyte colonies of 40 cells were enumerated and assessed for morphologic properties through inverted light microscopy. Isolated NAMNC were also spun to deposit them onto APTEX-coated slides, and these cytospin preparations were subjected to immunohistochemistry for CD34 expression. Flow Cytometry and Gating Strategy Samples of 2 10 5 NAMNC from two nasal polyposis patients were simultaneously stained with anti-cd45 fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) (anti-hle1) (Becton Dickinson, Mississauga, ON, Canada) and either anti-cd34 phycoerythrin (PE) (HPCA-2) (Becton-Dickinson) or isotypematched negative control antibody for 30 min at 4 C. The cells were then washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) plus 0.1% azide, fixed in PBS plus 1% paraformaldehyde, and refrigerated in the dark until ready for analysis. To enumerate CD34 progenitor cell numbers accurately in various samples, a multiparameter sequential gating strategy was used as described (7, 19). Briefly, the major population of lymphomononuclear cells was resolved on a dot plot of linear forward light scatter (FSC) versus linear side light scatter (SSC), and was gated into a region R1 to exclude contaminating events such as red blood cells, platelets, and cell debris (Figure 1A). CD45 events were established on a dot plot of CD45 staining versus SSC, and were gated into a region designated R2 (Figure 1B), where they were analyzed for CD34 staining, with CD34 cells being gated into a region designated R3 (Figure 1C). To determine the number of true CD34 progenitor cells, events defined by R1, R2, and R3 were analyzed on a dot plot of CD45 staining versus SSC, where CD34 blast cells clustered as defined into a region R4 (Figure 1D). These events fell into a discrete region, which represented lymphoblastoid cell characteristics (i.e., low to medium cell size and low granularity) (Figure 1E). Without changing any of the gates, analyses were done of the same sample stained with anti-cd45 FITC and PE-linked isotype control antibody (Figure 1F), or with anti-cd34 PE and FITC-linked isotype control antibody (data not shown). Endothelial Cell Cultures and Flow Cytometry Endothelial cells were isolated from human umbilical cord veins after collagenase digestion, and were grown to confluence in six-well plates (35 mm; Costar, Cambridge, MA) as previously described (18, 20, 21). First-passage cell cultures were incubated in either dimethyl sulfoxide (10 7 M) or budesonide (10 7 M) (Astra Draco, Sweden) medium for 24 h (37 C, 5% CO 2 /95% air). Half of the cells from each group were treated with tumor necrosis factor (TNF)- (100 ng/ml) (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN) for the final 4 h of culture. Cell suspensions were generated nonenzymatically, and direct immunofluorescence was done by incubating the endothelial cell suspensions with appropriate concentrations of anti-cd34pe (Clone QBEND-10; Immunotech, Marseille, France) or an irrelevant monoclonal Ab control as previously described (19). Cells were analyzed with an EPICS Profile flow cytometer (Coulter Corporation, Hialeah, FL). Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were recovered for flow cytometry by treatment with Versene 1:5,000 solution for 5 min at 37 C (Biofluids Inc., Rockville, MD). A total of 80 to 90% of cells was recovered with this method. Statistics For statistical analysis, the Mann Whitney rank sum test was used to assess differences between the numbers of CD34-immunoreactive cells and vessels and between the numbers of VWF-immunoreactive vessels in steroid-treated and steroid-untreated nasal polyps. Statistical significance was taken at P 0.05. Results Immunohistochemical Findings: CD34 and VWF Quantitation A summary of the immunohistochemical findings with QBEND 10 (anti-cd34 monoclonal antibody) and anti-

Kim, Uno, Hamilos, et al.: CD34 in Nasal Polyposis 391 Figure 1. Multiparameter flow cytometric analysis for enumeration of CD34 progenitor cells in nasal polyp cell suspensions. Region R1 represents lymphomononuclear cells (A). Anti-CD45 FITC staining of cells in R1 is defined as R2 (B). CD34 cells (R3) contained in R2 are scattered for CD34 staining versus SSC (C). The cells gated by R1, R2, and R3 are backscattered for CD45 staining versus SSC (R4) (D). Region R4 represents a lymphoblastic region in which all nasal polyp-derived CD34 cells scatter (E). Analysis of the same sample stained with anti-cd45 FITC and PE-linked isotype control antibody was done with the same gating strategy (F). VWF Ab for the steroid-treated and -untreated subject groups is given in Table 1. In general, substantial immunolocalization of CD34 was observed in some mononuclear cells and endothelial cells in all nasal polyps (Figure 2A). Endothelial cells showed moderate to strong cytoplasmic staining for CD34. CD34 reactivity was found diffusely over the entire cytoplasm of CD34 mononuclear cells. These CD34 mononuclear cells had an elliptical shape and a single, round, centrally located nucleus resembling immature (high nucleus-to-cytoplasm ratio) hemopoietic cells in morphology (Figures 2A and 3A). VWF endothelial cells showed moderate to strong diffuse cytoplasmic immunostaining for VWF (Figure 2B); however, there were TABLE 1 Characteristics of CD34 expression in nasal polyps and effects of topical budesonide CD34 Cells (/10 hpf ) CD34 Vessels (/0.5 mm 2 ) VWF Vessels (/0.5 mm 2 ) Steroid ( ) (n 12) 15.67 2.08* 101.25 6.24 62.33 7.57 Steroid ( ) (n 9) 5.33 1.36 57.22 8.00 54.89 10.78 P value 0.002 0.0008 0.43 * Values are means SD. Steroid ( ) steroid-treated nasal polyps; steroid ( ) steroid-untreated nasal polyps. Statistical tests were done with Mann Whitney rank sum test. no apparent VWF mononuclear cells in any nasal polyp tissues. Furthermore, the percent positivity of CD34 staining among the isolated MNC was 0.5 0.1% (mean SD), which was consistent with data on the frequency of CD34 cells in human peripheral and cord blood samples (19) (Figure 3B). The number of CD34-immunoreactive mononuclear cells was significantly higher in steroid-treated than in steroid-untreated nasal polyps (15.67 2.08 cells/10 hpf versus 5.33 1.36 cells/10 hpf, respectively, P 0.002). The number of CD34 endothelia was also significantly higher in steroid-treated nasal polyps than in steroid-untreated polyps (101.25 6.24 vessels/0.5 mm 2 of lamina propria versus 57.22 8.00 vessels/0.5 mm 2 of lamina propria, respectively, P 0.0008). However, the number of VWFimmunoreactive vessels in steroid-treated and steroiduntreated nasal polyps showed no significant difference (62.33 7.57 vessels/0.5 mm 2 of lamina propria versus 54.89 10.78 vessels/0.5 mm 2 of lamina propria, respectively, P 0.43). The intensity of CD34-immunoreactivity in nasal polyps of steroid-treated patients was not significantly different from those of steroid-untreated groups. Negative control experiments showed no staining with the respective isotype control antisera (Figures 2C and 3C). As a control for the effect of topical steroids on inflammatory cells in the polyps tested, we counted eosinophils, finding 8.3 6.4 per hpf in untreated versus 2.6 3.2 (mean SD) in steroid-treated polyps (P 0.0001).

392 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY VOL. 20 1999 Figure 2. Immunohistochemical localization of CD34 in nasal polyps. (A) Diffuse immunoreactive CD34 protein in the cytoplasm of mononuclear cells in the lamina propria (arrow). (B) Endothelial cells show immunostaining for VWF protein with antihuman VWF Ab. (C) No immunostaining is observed with isotype control Ab (mouse IgG 1 ). Scale bar 7 m (A), 9 m (B), 24 m (C). CD34 Immunostaining Before and After Systemic Corticosteroids As shown in Figures 4A and 4B, there was more intense immunostaining for CD34, especially of mononuclear cells, after a course of systemic (oral) corticosteroid therapy. Quantitation revealed a doubling of CD34 mononuclear cells after treatment (Table 2). Nasal Polyp-Derived Colonies Methylcellulose-based clonogenic assays were performed to confirm that nasal polyp MNC preparations in methylcellulose contained myeloid colony-forming cells (i.e., progenitors). Cultures of MNC isolated from nasal polyps yielded 5.8 0.6 (mean SD) myeloid colonies per 10 5 cells plated. A representative example is shown in Figure 5. FACS Analysis True CD34 progenitor cells were identified within the lymphomononuclear cell population (Figures 1A through 1E). They were defined as CD34 /CD45 cells with low cell granularity (SSC) and a small to medium cell size (FSC) (Figure 1E): 0.26% (of 27,000) events represented

Kim, Uno, Hamilos, et al.: CD34 in Nasal Polyposis 393 true CD34 progenitor cells. This percentage is equivalent to that reported for CD34 cells in human peripheral blood samples (19). Percent staining of the background with the FITC-linked or PE-linked isotype control antibody in the identical gating regions to those shown in Figures 1A through 1E was 0.00% (data not shown) and 0.02% (Figure 1F), respectively. Effects of Corticosteroids In Vitro on HUVEC Expression of CD34 To determine whether budesonide acts directly on the endothelium to induce CD34 expression, we cultured HU- VECs (first passage) for 24 h with and without budesonide (10 7 M), and performed flow cytometry with a PE-conjugated antibody to CD34 (n 2; Figure 6). Half of the cells from each group were stimulated with TNF- (100 ng/ml) for the final 4 h of culture. Budesonide did not have any effect on the CD34 staining seen. TNF- stimulation resulted in little if any reduction in CD34 staining in both control- and budesonide-treated cultures. Figure 3. CD34 immunoreactivity of isolated MNC in nasal polyps. (a) CD34 MNC have morphologic characteristics of immature myeloid cells. (b) CD34 immunoreactivity in polyp MNC is observed at a frequency expected of hemopoietic progenitors in human blood samples. (c) Negative control experiments show no staining. Scale bar 6 m (a), 24 m (b), 9 m (c). Discussion In this study, we showed the presence of CD34-immunoreactive protein on MNC and vascular endothelial cells in the lamina propria of nasal polyps. In patients who had undergone 4 wk of topical corticosteroid treatment, the numbers of the CD34 cells and vessels in nasal polyps were increased significantly over those in clinically similar patients with steroid-untreated polyps. In addition, in one patient whose polyp tissue was examined both before and after systemic (oral) corticosteroid therapy, CD34 immunostaining was more intense, with an increase in quantifiable CD34 mononuclear cells. Because corticosteroid treatment may induce angiogenesis, we also performed immunostaining for VWF to compare the number of vessels in steroid-treated and steroid-untreated polyps: VWF reactivity was no different in steroid-treated than in steroid-untreated nasal polyps. Although CD34 immunoreactivity has been detected on osteoclasts, peripheral nerve sheath cells, and fibroblasts (18), CD34 cells in polyps were different from these cells morphologically, resembling immature hemopoietic cells (22), as shown in Figures 2A and 3A. Furthermore, the presence of CD34 /CD45 cells within the lymphomononuclear cell population isolated from nasal polyps and the derivation of myeloid colonies in methylcellulose from polyp NAMNC provide further evidence that polyp immunostainable CD34 cells are true hemopoietic progenitor cells. It is well known that the numbers of inflammatory cells such as eosinophils are increased in the airways in such chronic airway inflammatory conditions as bronchial asthma (23) and nasal polyps (24). More than one mechanism may contribute to persistent increases in airway inflammatory cells in these conditions. First, there is the possibility of enhanced bone marrow production and activation or prolonged survival of mature inflammatory cells, as has been demonstrated for tissue mast cells (25 27). Another possibility is that a process of increased infiltration and terminal differentiation of inflammatory-cell progenitors may occur from expanded progenitor populations in the blood. Indeed, increased numbers of inflammatory-cell (eosinophil/basophil) progenitors have been documented in the peripheral blood and bone marrow of atopic humans and those with asthma/airway hyperresponsiveness (2 4, 28), in the latter group in exacerbations of disease or in response to allergen inhalation (4 6). These progenitors, assayed as colony-forming cells, are present within nasal pol-

394 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY VOL. 20 1999 Figure 4. CD34 staining in nasal polyps before and after treatment with systemic corticosteroids in one patient. (A) Immunolocalization of CD34 is observed on both MNC and endothelial cells in nasal polyp before corticosteroid treatment. (B) MNC show more intense staining for CD34 after corticosteroid treatment. Scale bar 24 m. yps (12), and may therefore serve as potential targets for hemopoietic differentiation factors which are also produced with nasal polyp tissues (11 13, 24). Thus, an increased population of circulating basophil/eosinophil progenitors, and the local presence of cytokines capable of stimulating their differentiation, especially in patients with atopy and nasal polyposis, provides circumstantial evidence that differentiation may occur locally within chronically inflamed tissues. Our finding of CD34 mononuclear cells within nasal polyp tissue is consistent with this hypothesis. A complementary hypothesis is that steroids, although having no effect on cell trafficking, inhibit local (i.e., within-polyp) CD34 cell differentiation; in this model, steroids act to block differentiation and prolong CD34 expression. The expression of CD34 is not restricted to hemopoietic progenitor cells, but has also been detected by immunohistochemical analysis on vascular endothelium of normal and neoplastic tissues (29 34). It has also been shown that Figure 5. Morphologic features of a nasal polyp-derived myeloid colony. Colonies were cultured from NAMNC in nasal polyp, in the presence of 10 ng/ml of rhgm-csf.

Kim, Uno, Hamilos, et al.: CD34 in Nasal Polyposis 395 TABLE 2 Changes in CD34 staining in nasal polyp before and after systemic corticosteroid treatment in one patient CD34 Cells (/10 hpf ) CD34 Vessels (/0.5 mm 2 ) Before steroid treatment 7.6 4.1* 22.0 12.1 After steroid treatment 15.4 4.6 26.2 5.5 * Values are mean SD. Figure 6. Effect of budesonide on CD34 expression by HUVEC in vitro. Although a slight increase in HUVEC CD34 staining was observed after in vitro budesonide treatment, the difference from control was not statistically significant. In addition, stimulation with TNF- ( ) did not enhance CD34 expression in either control or budesonide-treated cultures. Results of two experiments, mean SD of replicate samples, are shown. Histogram was expressed by dividing the mean fluorescence intensity for anti- CD34 antibody by the mean fluorescence intensity for IgG isotype control. the relevant endothelial cells produce the same size protein (MW 110 kd) and express identical CD34 messenger RNA (2.3 kb) to that expressed by hemopoietic cells, indicating that CD34 antibodies bind to the CD34 gene product on endothelial cells, and not to a cross-reactive epitope (30). Many antibodies have been developed to detect various epitopes of CD34 (22); among these, the anti- CD34 antibody QBEND 10 has been reported to label blood vessels in normal skin (35). This antibody has been applied to frozen and paraffin-embedded tissue sections for diagnosing vascular tumors, including Kaposi s sarcoma (33). Previously, studies of endothelial cells indicated that when freshly isolated, these cells are CD34, but after a few passages they become CD34 (30). This finding suggests that the expression of CD34 protein by vascular endothelial cells is not constitutive but is instead regulated, possibly by cell contract, proliferation, or changes in the extracellular environment. Regulation of CD34 is also observed in hemopoiesis: the antigen is not expressed on hemopoietic cells as maturation progresses (22, 30). Ultrastructural analysis of umbilical artery and capillary vessels has shown that CD34 molecules are concentrated on membrane processes that interdigitate between adjacent endothelial cells (30). This observation, together with the biochemical feature of the CD34 molecule of being a highly negatively charged sialomucinlike glycoprotein, has led to the hypothesis that CD34 may play an antagonistic or inhibitory role in vascular endothelial cell adhesive function (31). Expression of CD34 at luminal junctions in vascular endothelia may therefore serve to modulate leukocyte infiltration into tissues and/or to increase the stringency requirements of ligand receptor interactions that facilitate adhesion (31, 32). The adhesion of leukocytes to vascular endothelia prior to their tissue infiltration appears to be regulated by various adhesion molecules on vascular endothelia, the expression of which can be modulated by various cytokines. In contrast to adhesion molecules such as E-selectin, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, the expression of CD34 is downregulated by cytokines such as IL-1, interferon-, TNF- in vitro and in vivo (29, 34). These data are compatible with the view that CD34 may have a negative modulating effect on the adhesive functions of endothelia, and that downregulation of this highly negatively charged molecule might be an important event in cytokine-mediated leukocyte adhesion and inflammation. It is therefore possible that the increased expression of CD34 on vessels in our steroid-treated nasal polyps might have been a reflection of inhibition of inflammatory cell/progenitor differentiation within, or of inflammatory cell infiltration into, polyp tissues. That budesonide had essentially no effect on CD34 expression in the HUVEC model may have several explanations. First and foremost, it may indicate that steroid effects in vivo are in fact indirect. For example, it is conceivable that steroids inhibit TNF- release by other cell types found in polyps, such as eosinophils, and because TNF- is known to downregulate endothelial CD34 expression, its inhibition may have a net enhancing effect on CD34 expression. It is also possible that HUVECs provide a relatively steroid-unresponsive endothelial model that may or may not reflect the in vivo situation (21, 36). In CD34-deficient, ovalbumin (OVA)-sensitized mice, eosinophil accumulation in the lung after OVA challenge is reduced (37), but no abnormalities are seen with lymphocyte or neutrophil recruitment. A role in eosinophil adhesion for a still not fully characterized, CD34-cross-reactive, 90-kD protein that may bind L-selectin has been postulated from these observations. Although these data suggest that CD34 is important in eosinophil infiltration, the role of CD34 in this process may involve a complex, multistep mechanism. In humans, local administration of glucocorticoids decreases the number of mast cells in the skin (38), synovium (39), and nose (40), as well as the number of activated eosinophils in the airways in asthma and cases of nasal polyps (38). Several investigators have already shown that corticosteroids inhibit the production of cytokines by activated T lymphocytes and other structural cells (38), as well as inhibiting stem cell factor-induced differentiation of mast cells from progenitors in fetal liver in vitro (41). Our data show that an increase of CD34 mononuclear cells

396 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY VOL. 20 1999 occurs in steroid-treated nasal polyps. A possible mechanism for this increase in CD34 cells in steroid-treated nasal polyps may be decreased production of hemopoietic cytokines and subsequent inhibition of the differentiation of mature cells from progenitors residing in nasal polyp tissue. In conclusion, we have shown that CD34 mononuclear cells and CD34 endothelial cells are present in nasal polyps. Topical corticosteroid treatment is associated with increased numbers of all CD34 cells, both mononuclear and endothelial. These findings are consistent with the presence of inflammatory-cell progenitors in nasal polyps. Furthermore, they suggest that topical corticosteroids suppress leukocyte recruitment by upregulating CD34 expression on vascular endothelium in nasal polyps. References 1. Kanai, N., J. Denburg, M. Jordana, and J. Dolovich. 1994. Nasal polyp inflammation: effect of topical nasal steroid. Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 150:1094 1100. 2. Otsuka, H., J. Dolovich, A. D. Befus, J. Bienenstock, and J. A. Denburg. 1986. Peripheral blood basophils, basophil progenitors, and nasal metachromatic cells in allergic rhinitis. Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. 133:757 762. 3. Denburg, J. A., S. Telizyn, A. Belda, J. Dolovich, and J. Bienenstock. 1985. Increased numbers of circulating basophil progenitors in atopic patients. J. Allergy Clin. Immunol. 76:466 472. 4. Gibson, P. G., P. J. Manning, P. M. O Byrne, A. Girgis-Gabardo, J. Dolovich, J. A. Denburg, and F. E. Hargreave. 1991. Allergen-induced asthmatic responses: relationship between increases in airway responsiveness and increases in circulating eosinophils, basophils, and their progenitors. Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. 143:331 335. 5. Wood, L. J., M. D. Inman, R. M. Watson, R. Foley, J. A. Denburg, and P. M. O Byrne. 1997. Inhaled allergen-induced changes in bone marrow eosinophil/basophil progenitors in mild asthmatic subjects. J. Allergy Clin. Immunol. 99:S364. (Abstr.) 6. Sehmi, R., L. J. Wood, R. Watson, R. Foley, Q. Hamid, P. M. O Byrne, and J. A. Denburg. 1997. Allergen induced increases in IL-5 receptor -subunit expression on bone marrow derived CD34 cells from asthmatic subjects: a novel marker of progenitor cell commitment toward eosinophilic differentiation. J. Clin. Invest. 100:2466 2475. 7. Sehmi, R., K. Howie, D. R. Sutherland, W. Schragge, P. M. O Byrne, and J. A. Denburg. 1996. Increased levels of CD34 hemopoietic progenitor cells in atopic subjects. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol. 15:645 654. 8. Strauss, L. C., S. D. Rowley, V. F. La Russa, S. J. Sharkis, R. K. Stuart, and C. I. Civin. 1986. Antigenic analysis of hematopoiesis: V. Characterization of My-10 antigen expression by normal lymphohematopoietic progenitor cells. Exp. Hematol. 14:878 886. 9. Bender, J. G., K. L. Unverzagt, D. E. Walker, W. Lee, D. E. Van Epps, D. H. Smith, C. C. Stewart, and L. B. To. 1991. Identification and comparison of CD34-positive cells and their subpopulations from normal peripheral blood and bone marrow using multicolor flow cytometry. Blood 77: 2591 2596. 10. Shalit, M., S. Sekhsaria, and H. L. Malech. 1995. Modulation of growth and differentiation of eosinophils from human peripheral blood CD34 cells by IL5 and other growth factors. Cell. Immunol. 160:50 57. 11. Ohnishi, M., J. Ruhno, J. Dolovich, and J. A. Denburg. 1988. Allergic rhinitis nasal mucosal conditioned medium stimulates growth and differentiation of basophil/mast cell and eosinophil progenitors from atopic blood. J. Allergy Clin. Immunol. 81:1149 1154. 12. Otsuka, H., J. Dolovich, M. Richardson, J. Bienenstock, and J. A. Denburg. 1987. Metachromatic cell progenitors and specific growth and differentiation factors in human nasal mucosa and polyps. Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. 136:710 717. 13. Kim, Y. K., N. Nakagawa, K. Nakano, I. Sulakvelidze, J. Dolovich, and J. Denburg. 1997. Stem cell factor in nasal polyposis and allergic rhinitis: increased expression by structural cells is suppressed by in vivo topical corticosteroids. J. Allergy Clin. Immunol. 100:389 399. 14. Rottem, M., T. Okada, J. P. Goff, and D. D. Metcalfe. 1994. Mast cells cultured from the peripheral blood of normal donors and patients with mastocytosis originate from a CD34 /Fc epsilon RI-cell population. Blood 84:2489 2496. 15. Sorden, S. D., and W. L. Castleman. 1995. Virus-induced increases in bronchiolar mast cells in Brown Norway rats are associated with both local mast cell proliferation and increases in blood mast cell precursors. Lab. Invest. 73:197 204. 16. Kitamura, Y., T. Tsujimura, T. Jippo, T. Kasugai, and Y. Kanakura. 1995. Regulation of development, survival and neoplastic growth of mast cells through the c-kit receptor. Int. Arch. Allergy Immunol. 107:54 56. 17. Hsu, S. M., L. Raine, and H. Fanger. 1981. Use of avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex (ABC) in immunoperoxidase techniques: a comparison between ABC and unlabeled antibody (PAP) procedures. J. Histochem. Cytochem. 29:577 580. 18. Lin, G., E. Finger, and J. C. Gutierrez-Ramos. 1995. Expression of CD34 in endothelial cells, hematopoietic progenitors and nervous cells in fetal and adult mouse tissues. Eur. J. Immunol. 25:1508 1516. 19. Sutherland, D. R., A. Keating, R. Nayar, S. Anania, and A. K. Stewart. 1994. Sensitive detection and enumeration of CD34 cells in peripheral and cord blood by flow cytometry. Exp. Hematol. 22:1003 1010. 20. Schleimer, R. P., and B. K. Rutledge. 1986. Cultured human vascular endothelial cells acquire adhesiveness for neutrophils after stimulation with interleukin 1, endotoxin, and tumor-promoting phorbol diesters. J. Immunol. 136:649 654. 21. Kaiser, J., C. A. Bickel, B. S. Bochner, and R. P. Schleimer. 1993. The effects of the potent glucocorticoid budesonide on adhesion of eosinophils to human vascular endothelial cells and on endothelial expression of adhesion molecules. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 267:245 249. 22. Marsh, J. C., D. R. Sutherland, J. Davidson, A. Mellors, and A. Keating. 1992. Retention of progenitor cell function in CD34 cells purified using a novel O-sialoglycoprotease. Leukemia 6:926 934. 23. Gibson, P. G., A. Girgis-Gabardo, M. M. Morris, S. Mattoli, J. M. Kay, J. Dolovich, J. Denburg, and F. E. Hargreave. 1989. Cellular characteristics of sputum from patients with asthma and chronic bronchitis. Thorax 44: 693 699. 24. Jordana, M., J. Dolovich, I. Ohno, S. Finotto, and J. Denburg. 1995. Nasal polyposis: a model for chronic inflammation. In Asthma and Rhinitis. W. W. Busse and S. T. Holgate, editors. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Boston. 156 164. 25. Galli, S. J. 1990. Biology of disease. New insights into the riddle of the mast cells : microenvironmental regulation of mast cell development and phenotypic heterogeneity. Lab. Invest. 62:5 33. 26. Galli, S. J. 1993. New concepts about the mast cell. N. Engl. J. Med. 328: 257 265. 27. Kobayashi, T., T. Nakano, T. Nakahata, H. Asai, Y. Yagi, K. Tsuji, A. Komiyama, T. Akabane, S. Kojima, and Y. Kitamura. 1986. Formation of mast cell colonies in methylcellulose by mouse peritoneal cells and differentiation of these cloned cells in both the skin and the gastric mucosa of W/W v mice: evidence that a common precursor can give rise to both connective tissue-type and mucosal mast cells. J. Immunol. 136:1378 1384. 28. Gibson, P. G., J. Dolovich, A. Girgis-Gabardo, M. M. Morris, M. Anderson, F. E. Hargreave, and J. A. Denburg. 1990. The inflammatory response in asthma exacerbation: changes in circulating eosinophils, basophils and their progenitors. Clin. Exp. Allergy 20:661 668. 29. Delia, D., M. G. Lampugnani, M. Resnati, E. Dejana, A. Aiello, E. Fontanella, D. Soligo, M. A. Pierotti, and M. F. Greaves. 1993. CD34 expression is regulated reciprocally with adhesion molecules in vascular endothelial cells in vitro. Blood 81:1001 1008. 30. Fina, L., H. V. Molgaard, D. Robertson, N. J. Bradley, P. Monaghan, D. Delia, D. R. Sutherland, M. A. Baker, and M. F. Greaves. 1990. Expression of the CD34 gene in vascular endothelial cells. Blood 75:2417 2426. 31. Healy, L., G. May, K. Gale, F. Grosveld, M. Greaves, and T. Enver. 1995. The stem cell antigen CD34 functions as a regulator of hemopoietic cell adhesion. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 92:12240 12244. 32. Schlingemann, R. O., F. J. R. Rietveld, R. M. de Waal, N. J. Bradley, A. I. Skene, A. J. S. Davies, M. F. Greaves, J. Denekamp, and D. J. Ruiter. 1990. Leukocyte antigen CD34 is expressed by a subset of cultured endothelial cells and on endothelial albuminal microprocesses in the tumor stroma. Lab. Invest. 62:690 696. 33. Sankey, E. A., L. More, and A. P. Dhillon. 1990. QBEnd/10: a new immunostain for the routine diagnosis of Kaposi s sarcoma. J. Pathol. 161:267 271. 34. Norton, J., J. P. Sloane, D. Delia, and M. F. Greaves. 1993. Reciprocal expression of CD34 and cell adhesion molecule ELAM-1 on vascular endothelium in acute cutaneous graft-versus-host disease. J. Pathol. 170:173 177. 35. Ramani, P., N. J. Bradley, and C. D. Fletcher. 1990. QBEND/10, a new monoclonal antibody to endothelium: assessment of its diagnostic utility in paraffin sections. Histopathology 17:237 242. 36. Schleimer, R. P., H. S. Freeland, S. P. Peters, K. E. Brown, and C. P. Derse. 1989. An assessment of the effects of glucocorticoids on degranulation, chemotaxis, binding to vascular endothelium and formation of leukotriene B4 by purified human neutrophils. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 250:598 605. 37. Suzuki, A., D. P. Andrew, J. A. Gonzalo, M. Fukumoto, J. Spellberg, M. Hashiyama, H. Takimoto, N. Gerwin, I. Webb, G. Molineux, R. Amakawa, Y. Tada, A. Wakeham, J. Brown, I. McNiece, K. Ley, E. C. Butcher, T. Suda, J. C. Gutierrez-Ramos, and T. W. Mak. 1996. CD34-deficient mice have reduced eosinophil accumulation after allergen exposure and show a novel crossreactive 90-kD protein. Blood 87:3550 3562. 38. Schleimer, R. P. 1990. Effects of glucocorticosteroids on inflammatory cells

Kim, Uno, Hamilos, et al.: CD34 in Nasal Polyposis 397 relevant to their therapeutic applications in asthma. Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. 141:S59 S69. 39. Malone, D. G., R. L. Wilder, A. M. Saavedra-Delgado, and D. D. Metcalfe. 1987. Mast cell numbers in rheumatoid synovial tissues: correlations with quantitative measures of lymphocytic infiltration and modulation by antiinflammatory therapy. Arthritis Rheum. 30:130 137. 40. Rak, S., M. R. Jacobson, R. M. Sudderick, K. Masuyama, S. Juliusson, A. B. Kay, Q. Hamid, O. Lowhagen, and S. R. Durham. 1994. Influence of prolonged treatment with topical corticosteroid (fluticasone propionate) on early and late phase nasal responses and cellular infiltration in the nasal mucosa after allergen challenge. Clin. Exp. Allergy 24:930 939. 41. Irani, A. A., G. Nilsson, L. K. Ashman, and L. B. Schwartz. 1995. Dexamethasone inhibits the development of mast cells from dispersed human fetal liver cells cultured in the presence of recombinant human stem cell factor. Immunology 84:72 78.