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Query: HUMANGGP:021712 (
IL-6
)
58,419
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The measurement of cytokine mRNA levels is of fundamental importance in the understanding of diverse pathological states. We present a simplification of a polymerase chain reaction-based technique which permits the simultaneous measurement of up to 20 cytokine mRNAs, together with those of several other cellular products, including beta 2-microglobulin and beta-actin. The technique makes use of internal standards bearing multiple PCR primer sites which are identical to those on the mRNAs to be assayed. Known quantities of the standards are added to the cellular RNA and the mixture is co-reverse transcribed and co-amplified. The simplifications described here are based on the fact that each pair of amplicons accumulates in a constant ratio even in the plateau phase of amplification. As a result, no preliminary experiments to determine the limits of the exponential phase of amplification are necessary; the same number of cycles may be chosen for all the mRNAs to be measured, whatever their level in the mixture might be; pipetting errors are avoided since all calculations are based upon the relative quantities of co-amplified material. Here we illustrate the method through a quantitative study of the expression of cytokine mRNAs in U373 human astrocytoma cells before and after stimulation with IL-1 beta. Quantitation was carried out either by incorporating radioactivity in the amplicons or by fluorescence measurements after propidium iodide staining. Only very low numbers of transcripts for
IL-6
, IL-8, CSF-1,
MCP-1
and either Gro alpha or Gro beta were detectable in unstimulated cells. The levels of these cytokine mRNAs increased dramatically following IL-1 beta stimulation and, in addition, transcription of IL-1 beta, TNF alpha, GM-CSF, G-CSF, Gro gamma and
MCP-1
, some of which have not previously been detected in U373, was initiated in the stimulated cells. At the same time we found that transcripts for IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, IFN gamma, huMlP1 alpha and huMlP1 beta were totally absent in this cell line. These results suggest a potentially important role for astrocytes in the local amplification of inflammatory responses in the brain.
...
PMID:Simultaneous quantitation of cytokine mRNAs in interleukin-1 beta stimulated U373 human astrocytoma cells by a polymerisation chain reaction method involving co-amplification with an internal multi-specific control. 129 3
Inflammation, thrombosis, and immunity involve close interactions between leukocytes and vascular endothelium. Endothelial cells represent both targets and producers of lymphokines. Our study was designed to define the capacity of human endothelial cells (HEC) to produce a novel, recently purified, and molecularly cloned monocyte chemotactic and activating factor. This factor has been identified in the culture supernatants of tumor cell lines (tumor-derived chemotactic factor (TDCF)) as well as activated monocytes and fibroblasts (monocyte chemotactic and activating protein, MCAF, or monocyte chemoattractant protein-1,
MCP-1
). IL-1 induced high levels of production of chemotactic activity for monocytes in culture supernatants of HEC. IL-1-treated HEC expressed high levels of MCAF/
MCP-1
/TDCF mRNA transcripts, as assessed by Northern blot analysis. TNF and LPS, unlike
IL-6
, also induced MCAF/
MCP-1
/TDCF gene expression. Nuclear run off experiments revealed that IL-1-activated transcription of the MCAF/
MCP-1
/TDCF gene. The production of MCAF/
MCP-1
/TDCF may represent one of the mechanisms whereby endothelial cells, exposed to inflammatory signals, participate in the regulation of leukocyte extravasation. Production of this cytokine by vascular cells may in particular be relevant under conditions of selective extravasation and activation of mononuclear phagocytes.
...
PMID:Monocyte chemotactic and activating factor gene expression induced in endothelial cells by IL-1 and tumor necrosis factor. 218 12
Chronic rejection, the most important cause of long-term graft failure, is thought to result from both alloantigen-dependent and -independent factors. To examine these influences, cytokine dynamics were assessed by semiquantitative competitive reverse transcriptase-PCR and by immunohistology in an established rat model of chronic rejection lf renal allografts. Isograft controls develop morphologic and immunohistologic changes that are similar to renal allograft changes, although quantitatively less intense and at a delayed speed; these are thought to occur secondary to antigen-independent events. Sequential cytokine expression was determined throughout the process. During an early reversible allograft rejection episode, both T-cell associated [interleukin (IL) 2, IL-2 receptor, IL-4, and interferon gamma] and macrophage (IL-1 alpha, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and
IL-6
) products were up-regulated despite transient immunosuppression. RANTES (regulated upon activation, normal T-cell expressed and secreted) peaked at 2 weeks; intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM-1) was maximally expressed at 6 weeks. Macrophage products such as monocyte chemoattractant protein (
MCP-1
) increased dramatically (to 10 times), presaging intense peak macrophage infiltration at 16 weeks. In contrast, in isografts, ICAM-1 peaked at 24 weeks.
MCP-1
was maximally expressed at 52 weeks, commensurate with a progressive increase in infiltrating macrophages. Cytokine expression in the spleen of allograft and isograft recipients was insignificant. We conclude that chronic rejection of kidney allografts in rats is predominantly a local macrophage-dependent event with intense up-regulation of macrophage products such as
MCP-1
,
IL-6
, and inducible nitric oxide synthase. The cytokine expression in isografts emphasizes the contribution of antigen-independent events. The dynamics of RANTES expression between early and late phases of chronic rejection suggest a key role in mediating the events of the chronic process.
...
PMID:Sequential cytokine dynamics in chronic rejection of rat renal allografts: roles for cytokines RANTES and MCP-1. 756 6
BCG infection of mice provides a convenient model to study natural and cellular immunity to mycobacteria and the mechanisms of granuloma formation and repair. We have used a range of macrophage (M phi) membrane molecules and secretory products to investigate resident M phi-pathogen interactions and T lymphocyte-dependent recruitment and activation of M phi in different tissues of immature, normal adult and gamma interferon deficient animals. In situ hybridization (ISH), RT-PCR and immunocytochemical analysis of M phi gene and product expression have been correlated with in vitro study of endocytic and secretory activity in which biogel polyacrylamide bead-elicited peritoneal M phi are exposed to Th1 and Th2 cytokines, LPS, BCG and other stimuli. The role of resident and newly recruited M phi responding to BCG in liver, spleen, lung and brain has been defined by means of antigen markers expressed by M phi (F4/80, 7/4, CR3, macrosialin, sialoadhesin and scavenger receptor) and/or T and B lymphoid cells (MHC Class II, CD4, CD8, B220). Heterogeneity in M phi secretory activity was revealed by ISH analysis of lysozyme, TNF-alpha, IL-1
IL-6
and
MCP-1
, by in vitro assay of NO and superoxide anion production, and by RT-PCR studies of Th1 (interferon gamma) and Th2 (IL-4, IL-13, IL-10) lymphokine mRNA in tissues. Our studies confirm the importance of interferon gamma as a critical mediator of host resistance to mycobacterial infection and raise intriguing questions in regard to T cell and M phi functional heterogeneity in distinct tissue microenvironments.
...
PMID:BCG-induced granuloma formation in murine tissues. 771 50
Pathogenic bacteria that penetrate the intestinal epithelial barrier stimulate an inflammatory response in the adjacent intestinal mucosa. The present studies asked whether colon epithelial cells can provide signals that are important for the initiation and amplification of an acute mucosal inflammatory response. Infection of monolayers of human colon epithelial cell lines (T84, HT29, Caco-2) with invasive strains of bacteria (Salmonella dublin, Shigella dysenteriae, Yersinia enterocolitica, Listeria monocytogenes, enteroinvasive Escherichia coli) resulted in the coordinate expression and upregulation of a specific array of four proinflammatory cytokines, IL-8, monocyte chemotactic protein-1, GM-CSF, and TNF alpha, as assessed by mRNA levels and cytokine secretion. Expression of the same cytokines was upregulated after TNF alpha or IL-1 stimulation of these cells. In contrast, cytokine gene expression was not altered after infection of colon epithelial cells with noninvasive bacteria or the noninvasive protozoan parasite, G. lamblia. Notably, none of the cell lines expressed mRNA for IL-2, IL-4, IL-5,
IL-6
, IL-12p40, IFN-gamma, or significant levels of IL-1 or IL-10 in response to the identical stimuli. The coordinate expression of IL-8,
MCP-1
, GM-CSF and TNF alpha appears to be a general property of human colon epithelial cells since an identical array of cytokines, as well as
IL-6
, also was expressed by freshly isolated human colon epithelial cells. Since the cytokines expressed in response to bacterial invasion or other proinflammatory agonists have a well documented role in chemotaxis and activation of inflammatory cells, colon epithelial cells appear to be programmed to provide a set of signals for the activation of the mucosal inflammatory response in the earliest phases after microbial invasion.
...
PMID:A distinct array of proinflammatory cytokines is expressed in human colon epithelial cells in response to bacterial invasion. 1113 75
Macrophages, within the cytokine network, are a major source of many cytokines involved in immune response, hematopoiesis, inflammation and many other homeostatic processes. Upon stimulation by micro-organisms, microbial products or endogenous factors including cytokines, macrophages can de novo synthesize and release a large variety of cytokines (ie IL-1, IL-1ra,
IL-6
, IL-8, IL-10, IL-12, TNF alpha, IFN alpha, IFN gamma,
MCP-1
, MCP-3, MIF, M-CSF, G-CSF, GM-CSF, MIP-1, MIP-2, LIF, OSM, TGF beta). Some cytokines can upregulate the production of cytokines by macrophages (IL-3, GM-CSF, IFN gamma) while others can inhibit it (IL-4, IL-10, IL-13, TGF beta). In addition, these cytokines can modulate most of the macrophage functions and cell surface marker expression. Other cytokines (the chemokines such as
MCP-1
,2,3, MIP-1,2 and RANTES) contribute to the recruitment of circulating monocytes within tissues. It is worth noting that macrophages can be their own source of regulatory cytokines.
...
PMID:Cytokines and macrophages. 785 54
C/EBP-related proteins 2 and 3 (CRP2 and CRP3) are differentially expressed by P388 lymphoblasts and their derivative P388D1(IL1) macrophages. We have ectopically expressed CRP2, the predominant CRP in macrophages, in P388 lymphoblasts. The expression of CRP2 is sufficient to confer the lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-inducible expression of interleukin 6 and monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 to lymphoblasts, which normally do not display LPS induction of inflammatory cytokines. Consistent with these findings, the expression of CRP2 antisense RNA blocks the LPS induction of
IL-6
expression in P388D1(IL1) macrophages. This work clearly establishes the essential role of CRP2 in the induction of cytokine genes by LPS. Additionally, these data add
MCP-1
to the list of cytokines showing an involvement of CRP2 in their expression.
...
PMID:C/EBP-related protein 2 confers lipopolysaccharide-inducible expression of interleukin 6 and monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 to a lymphoblastic cell line. 804 85
The myocardial ischemia and reperfusion injury is caused by the re-introduction of coronary circulation in ischemic myocardial tissues. A number of experiments demonstrate that immunological response such as adherence of neutrophils to endothelial cells play a critical role in reperfusion injury. In this paper, the effect of global ischemia and reperfusion on the expression of cytokine genes by myocardial tissues as well as cell adhesion molecules by neutrophils were studied by using Langendorff model. Cardiac dysfunction and immunological response in 25 min global ischemia at 37.5 degrees C followed by 60 min reperfusion were studied in isolated rat heart perfused with blood supplied from support rat (Langendorff model). Cardiac functions were measured with a left intraventricular balloon. The mean post-experimental reduction of the left ventricular end-systolic pressure were 87.5 +/- 1.6% of pre-experimental level in the control perfusion group and 55.5 +/- 5.8% in the reperfusion group. Immunofluorescence flow cytometry showed that ischemia and reperfusion injury did not affect the expression of adhesion molecules on neutrophils which were isolated from perfused blood samples. Cytokine gene expression was analyzed by direct analysis of mRNA obtained from the blood-perfused, isolated rat heart. The level of expression of the cytokine genes was assessed using semiquantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (semiquantitative RT-PCR).
IL-6
, IL-8, IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha were expressed in normal heart tissue at low level and were upregulated following ischemia and reperfusion. IL-1 beta,
MCP-1
and IL-1 receptor antagonist were not expressed at detectable level in normal heart but were induced following global ischemia. IL-1 alpha was not expressed at detectable level in normal heart but was induced following reperfusion of the ischemic heart. Histological examination of myocardial tissue from the reperfusion group revealed no evidence of myocardial necrosis. Only a mild interstitial edema as well as weak focal hemorrhage was detected after reperfusion of ischemic hearts. These results suggest that there is a process which causes early stage of post-ischemic myocardial dysfunction without involving myocardial necrosis nor infiltration of inflammatory cells.
...
PMID:[Cardiac dysfunction and endogenous cytokines in global ischemia and reperfusion injury]. 811 7
Hyperplasia of mesangial cells (MCs) precedes or accompanies progressive glomerular scarring, as is seen in chronic glomerulonephritis and diabetic glomerulosclerosis. The mechanisms causing in vivo MC proliferation and production of extracellular matrix (ECM) are incompletely understood. Cell culture studies have demonstrated that MCs produce as well as react to various polypeptide cytokines. Thus, MCs have the potential to generate soluble mediators which can, in a paracrine fashion, attract and activate inflammatory cells (platelets, monocyte-macrophages, granulocytes), for example by
IL-6
, IL-8,
MCP-1
and GM-CSF, and exert autocrine effects on MCs themselves, such as by promoting MC proliferation (by PDGF, IL-1,
IL-6
) or ECM production (by TGF-beta, IL-1). Recent in vitro results have revealed that specific non-soluble ECM components (collagen III, IV; laminin) also affect MC behavior with regard to adhesion, cell replication, ECM production as well as their response to cytokines. The latter effect appears to be mediated by alterations of cytokine receptor expression on MCs in the presence of the ECM components. "Cross-talk" between MCs, cytokines, ECM and inflammatory cells is likely to be of great importance in the regulation of the MC phenotype and may play a prominent role in the initiation and progression of glomerular inflammation. First in vivo findings in rats with experimental glomerular disease and in kidney biopsies from patients with glomerulonephritis have supported this concept by demonstrating abnormal MC expression of cytokines, their receptors and ECM proteins. These MC products may promote the recruitment and activation of inflammatory cells and perpetuate MC proliferation as well as ECM build-up.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cytokines and mesangial cells. 846 21
We have previously proposed that activated mesangial cells (MC) have a direct role in the initiation and propagation of inflammatory events within the glomerulus via the generation of the mesangioproliferative cytokine
IL-6
and the chemokines IL-8 and
MCP-1
. The objective of this study was to investigate the role of cAMP in the regulation of
IL-6
and IL-8 gene expression and peptide production in IL-1 stimulated human MC. Agents known to elevate cAMP, including dibutyryl cAMP (db-cAMP), forskolin or isobutyl-methylxanthine (IBMX) were alone unable to induce
IL-6
or IL-8 expression or production above media control levels, indicating activation of the cAMP pathway could not mimic IL-1 signaling events. In the presence of IL-1, all three agents produced a marked potentiation of
IL-6
mRNA expression and dose-dependent increase in
IL-6
peptide production (twofold), but had little or no effect on IL-8 mRNA expression or peptide generation. In marked contrast cholera toxin (CT) caused a dose-dependent potentiation of both IL-1-induced
IL-6
(approximately fourfold) and IL-8 peptide (approximately twofold) generation. The control agent, the purified binding subunit of cholera toxin (CT-B) which is devoid of ADP-ribosylating activity also enhanced
IL-6
and IL-8 (approximately twofold) peptide generation indicating cAMP-independent mechanisms may be involved in the CT up-regulation of these cytokines. Treatment of MC with the cycloxygenase inhibitor indomethacin resulted in partial inhibition (37%) of
IL-6
production but had no effect on IL-8 generation. Thus our data show that cAMP can potentiate IL-1 induced
IL-6
production, while having no effect on IL-8 induction, and PGE2 may operate via a positive feedback loop to up-regulate IL-1 induced
IL-6
. Taken together, our results demonstrate that cAMP differentially regulates
IL-6
and IL-8 production in IL-1-stimulated human MC.
...
PMID:Interleukin-1-induced IL-8 and IL-6 gene expression and production in human mesangial cells is differentially regulated by cAMP. 858 36
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