Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: HUMANGGP:031927 (cytokine)
144,509 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

There is, at present, considerable interest in the possible role for the proinflammatory cytokines, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-1, interleukin-6, and interferon-gamma in the pathogenesis of cancer cachexia. Indirect evidence for such a role is based on the observation that chronic administration of many of these cytokines, either alone or in combination, can reproduce the myriad of host responses seen in experimental and human cancer cachexia. Elevated plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-2, and interferon-gamma have rarely been detected in patients or experimental animals with cancer, although interleukin-6 levels appear to correlate with tumor progression in animal models. The strongest evidence for a causal role for cytokines has come from rodent studies in which tumor-bearing animals have been passively immunized with antibodies directed against individual cytokines. Several groups have shown modest but significant improvements in food intake and lean tissue retention with antibodies directed against tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-1, interleukin-6, and interferon-gamma. However, there has been no consistent finding that one cytokine is universally involved in cancer cachexia in histologically distinct tumor models. One ominous finding in several tumor models has been that the endogenous production of cytokines appears to support tumor growth. Such findings raise the intriguing possibility that these cytokines, although contributors to tissue wasting and anorexia, may also serve the tumor as either direct or indirect cell growth factors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The role of cytokines in cancer cachexia. 128 23

This paper reviews some of our findings which have shown the usefulness of in vitro methods in the study of hypothalamic neurones. (1) Membrane current analyses of dispersed neurones of the rat preoptic and anterior hypothalamus (POA) during thermal stimulation have revealed that warm-sensitive neurones are endowed with a non-inactivating Na+ channel having a high Q10 in the hyperthermic range (35-41 degrees C). (2) A brain slice study has shown that neurones in the organum vasculosum lamina terminalis (OVLT) region have much higher sensitivity to PGE2 than POA neurones. This provides further evidence of a critical role of the OVLT in translation of blood-borne cytokine signals into brain signals for fever induction. (3) Local application of IL-1 beta and IFN alpha altered the activity of thermosensitive (TS) neurones and glucose responsive (GR) neurones in vitro in an appropriate way to produce fever and anorexia. While the responses to IL-1 beta required the local release of prostaglandins, the responses to IFN alpha were found to be mediated by opioid receptor mechanisms. (4) The responses of POA TS neurones and VMH GR neurones to IL-1 beta but not those to IFN alpha, were reversibly blocked by alpha MSH, an endogenous antipyretic peptide. Thus, immune cytokines and their related neuroactive substances may affect hypothalamic TS and GR neurones thereby producing elaborately regulated changes in homeostatic functions such as thermoregulation (fever) and feeding (anorexia), which are considered as host defence responses.
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PMID:Effects of temperature and neuroactive substances on hypothalamic neurones in vitro: possible implications for the induction of fever. 131 97

Interleukin-1 beta (IL-1), a cytokine released from inflammatory cells, is thought to be involved in the anorexia associated with severe infection. To assess a possible role of the amino acid sequence found in the supposed IL-1 receptor binding sites, we determined the antagonistic effects of alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) and the carboxyl-terminal tripeptide of alpha-MSH-(11-13) (alpha-MSH-(11-13)) on the anorexia induced by intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) administration of 0.5 pmol IL-1. The parent alpha-MSH molecule completely prevented the induction of anorexia by IL-1 at both doses tested, 0.5 and 5.0 pmol. In contrast, alpha-MSH-(11-13) prevented the IL-1-induced anorexia only at 5.0 pmol, but not at 0.5 pmol. Intracerebroventricular injection of 5 pmol of the parent alpha-MSH molecule alone temporarily decreased food consumption at 1-2 h; 5.0 pmol of alpha-MSH-(11-13) alone did not affect food consumption. These data indicate that alpha-MSH can antagonize the anorexic effects of IL-1. The carboxyl-terminal tripeptide portion of alpha-MSH may be important for the antagonistic action of alpha-MSH on the anorexia induced by IL-1.
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PMID:Carboxyl-terminal tripeptide of alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone antagonizes interleukin-1-induced anorexia. 133 Jun 15

Tumor necrosis factor is a cytokine that participates in the mediation of numerous diseases associated with inflammation, cachexia, shock, and tissue injury. Early studies of the biology of TNF delineated its hormonal actions as well as its systemic toxicity. More recent investigations have drawn attention to its paracrine actions that predominate when it is produced locally in the brain or vital organs. For instance, when compartmentalized production of TNF occurs in the central nervous system it directly mediates fever, anorexia, and altered whole-body metabolism. Since these changes are mediated within the neural network they occur independently of simultaneously sampled serum TNF levels. These paracrine actions of TNF have implications for diseases associated with production of TNF in tissues (e.g. HIV cerebritis, multiple sclerosis, cerebral malaria and cancer), because they may differ markedly from the hormone like-actions associated with systemic release. Since TNF may be beneficial in some diseases yet injurious in others, both the hormonal and paracrine actions must be precisely defined in order to formulate novel treatment strategies based on either enhancing its useful effects, or suppressing toxicity.
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor in metabolism of disease: hormonal actions versus local tissue effects. 134 May 27

To determine whether the location of tumour growth influences host cytokine and metabolic responses, experimental subcutaneous (SQ) and liver (LIV) tumours were compared in Buffalo rats. An LIV tumour that was only 1 +/- 1% (P < 0.05 versus SQ) of body weight produced similar anorexia, weight loss, acute phase response, and systemic cytokine responses as are SQ tumour that was 10 +/- 2% of body weight. Neither tumour-bearing group had abnormal liver function tests or evidence of obstructive biliary pathology. Tumour necrosis factor (TNF) was detected by western analysis in both tumour as well as histologically normal liver remote from the tumour in the LIV group but not in livers of animals in freely fed and SQ groups. The proximity of the tumour to competent tissue macrophage populations, such as hepatic Kupffer cells, may be sufficient to induce cachexia. Hence, tumour location may be as important as tumour burden in determining the host's response to cancer.
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PMID:Tumour location influences local cytokine production and host metabolism. 134 Dec 37

The kinetics of cytokine release and acute-phase protein gene expression in liver were investigated in rats receiving a single intraperitoneal bolus dose of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Transient elevation of plasma tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) were detected. Hepatic messenger RNAs for two acute-phase proteins, alpha 1-acid glycoprotein and alpha 2-macroglobulin, were measured by Northern blotting and were found to increase to a maximum at 24 h, returning to normal by 72 h; plasma concentrations showed a slower but more sustained rise. For albumin, hepatic mRNA was reduced, being minimum at 24 h with a similar but more prolonged fall in plasma concentration. Pretreatment of rats with TNF-alpha monoclonal antibody 4 h before LPS ameliorated weight loss and anorexia, partially suppressed the rise in IL-6 and reduced the increase in hepatic mRNA and plasma concentrations of alpha 1-acid glycoprotein and alpha 2-macroglobulin. For albumin, however, such pretreatment had no effect on the fall in either hepatic mRNA or plasma concentration. Thus we have defined an in vivo role of TNF-alpha in the control of endotoxin-induced acute-phase protein generation.
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PMID:Kinetics of endotoxin-induced acute-phase protein gene expression and its modulation by TNF-alpha monoclonal antibody. 137 42

Anorexia and cachexia frequently complicate the late stages of malignancy and may be a prominent feature of early disease. The resulting weight loss often becomes a major focus of concern for the patient and the family and may significantly add to the morbidity and mortality of cancer. Factors which contribute to the wasting syndrome include the effects of the tumour, effects of chemotherapy, abnormalities of carbohydrate, fat and protein metabolism and the cytokine response. Administration of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is an important method of addressing malnutrition, particularly in patients with nonfunctioning gastrointestinal tracts. A critical review of the TPN cancer literature is provided along with a discussion of new approaches and future directions in the nutritional support of patients with malignant disease, such as anabolic agents, hydrazine sulfate and megestrol.
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PMID:Protein calorie malnutrition and cancer therapy. 141 97

The numerous interactions between the immune and neuroendocrine systems are being studied in a rapidly expanding interdisciplinary field called "immunoneuroendocrinology" or "psychoneuroimmunology". We have recently reported that interleukin-1 (IL-1), a cytokine mainly produced by activated monocytes and macrophages, has various central nervous system (CNS) actions besides its immunological activities. Among these activities, for example, IL-1 activates the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, a main hormonal response to stress, by stimulating the release of corticotropin-releasing factor from the hypothalamus. IL-1 also acts centrally in the brain to decrease food intake in a dose-related manner, suggesting that anorexia, a typical clinical manifestation frequently observed in acute infectious diseases, may be caused by IL-1, a cytokine that is released under such conditions as acute infection. Furthermore, we have very recently found that IL-1 has potent antisecretory and anti-ulcer actions mediated by the CNS. Based upon these results, we have proposed that there may be an "immune-brain-gut" axis, in which IL-1 acts as an afferent signal and gastric functions as efferent one. At this symposium, by presenting some of our data on the CNS effects of IL-1, we report the potential of these immunoneuroendocrinological studies for a better understanding of the pathophysiology of stress-induced gastrointestinal disorders.
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PMID:[Stress and gastroenterology: an immunoneuroendocrinological approach]. 151 74

Endotoxin, a lipopolysaccharide (LPS), is a bacterial cell wall product instrumental in producing deleterious host responses to infection. This LPS appears to act, in part, by triggering release of endogenous mediators such as cytokines. Repeated exposures to endotoxin produce attenuated responses to this molecule. To examine the mechanisms and biologic consequences of this tolerance to LPS, Wistar rats were subjected to a 14-day course of LPS administration. Tolerance to LPS with regard to anorexia, weight loss, and acute-phase responses was noted. Attenuation of these physiologic responses was accompanied by abrogation of circulating cytokine appearance in response to endotoxin, suggesting that tolerance to LPS is in part due to a decreased production of cytokines. Tolerance to LPS also diminished the response to a subsequent infected thermal injury, as measured by food intake, body weight, fibrinogen levels, and mortality. Thus, clinical conditions involving repeated exposure to LPS may modify the host's responses to subsequent injury. The attenuated responses to injury accompanying the decreased production of cytokines further implicate cytokines in the pathogenesis of injury and disease.
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PMID:Tolerance to endotoxin prevents mortality in infected thermal injury: association with attenuated cytokine responses. 156 35

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a pleiotropic cytokine, is produced by macrophages and other cells in a variety of infectious and noninfectious diseases. Ultimately, the net biological effects of TNF may be either beneficial or injurious to the host. For instance, during overwhelming bacterial infection, the acute overproduction of TNF causes septic shock syndrome characterized by hypotension, organ failure, and death. Antibodies against TNF prevent and reverse these sequelae in animal models of septic shock, and their use in humans is currently under investigation in clinical trials. In another instance, TNF has been implicated as an injurious mediator in the state of malnutrition that complicates the course of chronic infection and cancer. Termed cachexia, this chronic syndrome inevitably causes the afflicted host to succumb from weight loss, anorexia, and catabolism of protein and lipid. Experimental studies of animals exposed to TNF for protracted periods indicate that this cytokine is capable of causing cachexia, and the biochemical basis for these catabolic changes has been identified. More recent data indicate that the detrimental metabolic effects of TNF are not dependent upon its circulating levels in the bloodstream, but rather are dependent upon its actions locally in vital organs (e.g., brain). Thus, the metabolic basis for cachexia in infection may be largely dependent upon the amount of cytokine produced in metabolically important tissues. As a result, circulating TNF levels in cachectic patients may not accurately reflect the metabolic state of the host, and do not correlate to weight loss.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor and regulation of metabolism in infection: role of systemic versus tissue levels. 157 88


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