Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0026764 (
multiple myeloma
)
36,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mice immunized with homogeneous recombinant interleukin-1 alpha (
IL-1 alpha
) protein developed specific serum titers to the immunogen. Hybridomas resulting from the fusion of the immune spleen or lymph node cells to
myeloma
cells were analyzed by an antibody capture assay in which the antigen was present in solution. This assay enabled us to isolate two hybridomas secreting antibodies (designated 2F4 and 4G12) that recognized
IL-1 alpha
and not interleukin-1 beta as judged by the ability of the antibodies to: (a) precipitate
IL-1 alpha
, (b) inhibit the binding of 125I-
IL-1 alpha
to the IL-1 receptor on EL4 cells, (c) inhibit the biological activity of
IL-1 alpha
as measured in a lectin-induced, IL-1-dependent thymocyte proliferation assay. In a double determinant assay configuration, both antibodies, in conjunction with rabbit polyclonal anti-
IL-1 alpha
antibodies, could detect nanogram concentrations of
IL-1 alpha
in solution. Cross-inhibition studies indicated that the 2F4 and 4G12 antibodies bind to the same or spatially related epitopes since each can inhibit the binding of the other to
IL-1 alpha
.
...
PMID:Development and characterization of two neutralizing monoclonal antibodies to human interleukin-1 alpha. 325 6
In the present study the gene expression of cytokines promoting in vitro
myeloma
-cell growth was investigated by Northern blot analysis using total RNA of 36 tumour samples of patients with
multiple myeloma
(MM) or plasma cell leukaemia and poly(A)+ RNA of 10 human
myeloma
cell lines (HMCL). These cytokines included interleukin (IL)-1 alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-3, IL-6, granulocyte-macrophage (GM)-colony-stimulating factor (CSF) and granulocyte (G)-CSF. IL-1 beta, IL-6 and G-CSF genes were coexpressed in most patients, although at variable levels.
IL-1 alpha
transcripts were detected in 32% of patients in whom coexpression of IL-1 beta gene was found. IL-3 gene was not expressed in patients' cells and GM-CSF mRNA was detected in only 1/32 patients. No detectable transcripts for the above cytokines were present in HMCL, whereas IL-6 gene was expressed in 2/10 HMCL. We also looked for the presence of transcripts for IL-2, leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF) and transforming growth factor (TGF)beta in cells of tumour samples from the same patients and in HMCL. IL-2 gene was not expressed in MM patients and HMCL. Weak expression of LIF gene was detected in three patients (9%), and transforming growth factor beta (TGF beta) mRNA was observed in 12/12 tumour samples analysed and all HMCL. These results suggest that, among cytokines shown to control
myeloma
-cell growth in vitro, IL-1, IL-6 and G-CSF could play a role in the development of
myeloma
disease in vivo.
...
PMID:Cytokine gene expression in human multiple myeloma. 751 Sep 89
Plasma cytokines and immune markers were assessed during the clinical management of 42 patients with
multiple myeloma
, MM. Of the patients 22/42 (all with progressive disease) were studied from the time of diagnosis, through various treatment regimes, to remission, progression or death. 5/42 patients had monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS), 8/42 others had either indolent MM or stable MM, and a further 7/42 with progressive disease were also studied. IL-6, TNF-alpha,
IL-1 alpha
, IL-1 beta, beta 2 microglobulin (beta 2M), and neopterin were estimated in bloods taken under optimal conditions for cytokine detection. The levels were compared with a panel of samples from healthy volunteers. Both immunoreactive and biologically active plasma IL-6 levels were measured. Pretreatment IL-6 levels (both immunoreactive and biologically active) were found to correlate with severity of disease. In 13/22 patients with progressive disease who had been followed from the time of diagnosis over a 12-month period or until death, pretreatment IL-6 levels were predictive of response to therapy. Elevated plasma levels of TNF-alpha, beta 2M and neopterin were found in patients with progressive
multiple myeloma
, and this correlated with renal impairment. The analytes measured during the course of chemotherapy did not show correlation with disease progression or response to therapy.
...
PMID:Multiple myeloma: an immunoclinical study of disease and response to treatment. 779 95
Expression of mRNA for eight cytokines was analyzed in an in vitro response-proliferation and Ig-secretion--of normal human B lymphocytes. This was made possible by the use of murine thymoma cells as helper cells in conjunction with human T cell supernatant, and the design of human DNA sequence-specific primers for RT-polymerase chain reaction. mRNAs for interleukin (IL)2 and IL-4, but also for
IL-1 alpha
and IL-1 beta remained undetectable during the whole culture period in highly purified B cells prepared by a three-step purification protocol. However, tumor necrosis factor alpha and IL-6 mRNAs peaked during days 1-3 after culture start and became undetectable after 5-6 d, shortly before bulk B cell proliferation started to decline. In contrast, transforming growth factor beta 1 mRNA, after a progressive increase during the first few days, and IL-10 mRNA, after a peak on days 1-3, remained detectable in immunoglobulin (Ig)-secreting cultures throughout the observation period of 22 d. Clonal analysis on 8-d cultures that had been seeded with single B cells by autocloning with the cell sorter, revealed that 85% of 77 B cell clones studied, expressed TGF-beta 1 mRNA, and only 19% IL-10 mRNA. These findings show a differentiation stage-related cytokine program during a B cell response, whereby (a) B cells can become activated without
IL-1 alpha
or IL-1 beta expression; (b) mRNA for positive (IL-10) and negative (TGF-beta 1) autoregulatory factors coexists in cell populations during the later phase of the response, although not necessarily in all B cell clones; and (c) normal Ig-secreting cells cease IL-6 expression in contrast to their malignant counterparts,
myeloma
cells.
...
PMID:Cytokine mRNA expression during an in vitro response of human B lymphocytes: kinetics of B cell tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin (IL)6, IL-10, and transforming growth factor beta 1 mRNAs. 810 60
Osteolytic bone destruction and its complications, bone pain, pathologic fractures, and hypercalcemia, are a major source of morbidity and mortality in patients with
multiple myeloma
. The bone destruction in
multiple myeloma
is due to increased osteoclast (OCL) activity and decreased bone formation in areas of bone adjacent to
myeloma
cells. The mechanisms underlying osteolysis in
multiple myeloma
in vivo are unclear. We used a human plasma cell leukemia cell line, ARH-77, that has disseminated growth in mice with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) and expresses IgG kappa, as a model for human
multiple myeloma
, SCID mice were irradiated with 400 rads and mice were injected either with 10(6) ARH-77 cells intravenously (ARH-77 mice) or vehicle 24 hours after irradiation. Development of bone disease was assessed by blood ionized calcium levels, x-rays, and histology. All ARH-77, but none of control mice that survived irradiation, developed hind limb paralysis 28 to 35 days after injection and developed hypercalcemia (1.35 to 1.46 mmol/L) a mean of 5 days after becoming paraplegic. Lytic bone lesions were detected using x-rays in all the hypercalcemic mice examined. No lytic lesions or hypercalcemia developed in the controls. Controls or ARH-77 mice, after developing hypercalcemia, were then killed and bone marrow plasma from the long bones were obtained, concentrated, and assayed for bone-resorbing activity. Bone marrow plasma from ARH-77 mice induced significant bone resorption in the fetal rat long bone resorption assay when compared with controls (percentage of total 45Ca released = 35% +/- 4% v 11% +/- 1%). Histologic examination of tissues from the ARH-77 mice showed infiltration of
myeloma
cells in the liver and spleen and marked infiltration in vertebrae and long bones, with loss of bony trabeculae and increased OCL numbers. Interestingly, cultures of ARH-77 mouse bone marrow for early OCL precursors (colony-forming unit-granulocyte-macrophage [CFU-GM]) showed a threefold increase in CFU-GM from ARH-77 marrow versus controls (185 +/- 32 v 40 +/- 3 per 2 x 10(5) cell plated). Bone-resorbing human and murine cytokines such as interleukin-6 (IL-6),
IL-1 alpha
or beta, TGF-alpha, lymphotoxin, and TNF alpha were not significantly increased in ARH-77 mouse sera or marrow plasma, compared with control mice, although ARH-77 cells produce IL-6 and lymphotoxin in vitro. Conditioned media from ARH-77 cells induced significant bone resorption in the fetal rat long bone resorption assay when compared with untreated media (percentage of total 45Ca released = 22% +/- 2% v 11% +/- 1%). This effect was not blocked by anti-IL-6 or antilymphotoxin (percentage of total 45Ca released = 19% +/- 1% and 22% +/- 1%, respectively). Thus, we have developed a model of human
multiple myeloma
bone disease that should be very useful to dissect the pathogenesis of the bone destruction in
multiple myeloma
.
...
PMID:Development of an in vivo model of human multiple myeloma bone disease. 860 40
Cytokine messenger RNA expression was studied using the reverse transcription/polymerase chain reaction in 23 patients with
multiple myeloma
(MM), 16 with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS), 12 with post menopausal osteoporosis, (OP) and 12 normal controls. Messenger RNAs for
IL-1 alpha
, IL-1 beta, TNF-alpha, TNF-beta, IL-6 and M-CSF were sought in view of their reported pathogenic role in
myeloma
. Transcripts for IL-1 beta, TNF-alpha, TNF-beta and M-CSF were found frequently in all four groups of patients. The only significant difference in cytokine expression between the groups was for IL-6 which was expressed in 17% of controls compared with 87% of patients with MM (p < 0.001), 62% of patients with MGUS (p < 0.02) and 67% of patients with osteoporosis (p < 0.02). Further analysis of IL-6 expression by quantitative PCR showed significantly higher IL-6 mRNA levels in MM compared with MGUS (p < 0.006). There was no correlation however between expression of individual cytokines and clinical features of
myeloma
such as osteolytic bone disease or hypercalcaemia. We conclude that expression of IL-6 mRNA is significantly enhanced in
multiple myeloma
when compared with MGUS. However, since MGUS and osteoporosis were also associated with a high prevalence of IL-6 expression when compared with controls it is probable that factors other than IL-6 are responsible for the local osteolytic lesions which characterise MM, but which are not seen in MGUS or osteoporosis.
...
PMID:Cytokine expression in multiple myeloma and monoclonal gammopathy: analysis by reverse transcription/polymerase chain reaction and quantitative PCR. 904 67
The ST2 gene, which is specifically induced by growth stimulation, encodes interleukin-1 receptor-related proteins. Using the RT-PCR method, we found that the ST2 gene was broadly expressed in hematopoietic cell lines. It was also expressed specifically in helper T cell lines among lymphocytic cell lines. We analyzed the expression of ST2 in mouse helper T cell subsets with Northern blotting analysis. Mouse Th1 cell lines so far studied did not express ST2 mRNAs. On the other hand, one of the Th2 cell lines, D10, expressed ST2L (transmembrane form) without stimulation, while co-stimulation by PMA and A23187 induced ST2 (soluble form) mRNA. These results suggest that the ST2 gene is involved in the regulation of the immune system.
IL-1 alpha
, IL-1 beta, and receptor antagonist did not bind to ST2L protein, which prompted us to search for the specific ligand of ST2. The recombinant human ST2 protein was purified and labeled with FITC. The labeled human ST2 protein bound with
myeloma
-derived RPMI8226 cells among the various B-cell lines, indicating possible involvement of ST2 in T-cell/B-cell interaction.
...
PMID:The expression of ST2 gene in helper T cells and the binding of ST2 protein to myeloma-derived RPMI8226 cells. 905 98
<< Previous
1
2