Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pheochromocytoma can cause several paraneoplastic syndromes. We report a patient with pheochromocytoma who exhibited pyrexia and marked inflammatory signs along with an elevated serum interleukin-6 (IL-6) level. All of these abnormalities disappeared and serum IL-6 became undetectable by removal of the tumor. In addition, immunohistochemical analysis revealed the presence of IL-6 in the tumor cells. It is suggested that pyrexia and the elevation of acute phase proteins can be a paraneoplastic syndrome with pheochromocytoma, and that the elaboration of IL-6 from pheochromocytoma may play an important role in the development of the syndrome.
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PMID:Pheochromocytoma with pyrexia and marked inflammatory signs: a paraneoplastic syndrome with possible relation to interleukin-6 production. 189 Jan 58

It has been suggested that, as part of the inflammatory response to the presence of a tumor, various cytokines are produced and these induce hepatic synthesis of acute-phase proteins (APP). Under these circumstances it is not known what changes occur in the fixed component of hepatic protein synthesis. The aim of this study was to compare circulating interleukin-1 (IL-1), interleukin-6 (IL-6), and tumor necrosis factor (TNF) concentrations and fixed hepatic protein synthesis rates in a group of healthy controls (n = 6) with a group of patients with an established APP response secondary to hepatic metastasis from colorectal cancer (n = 6). Fixed hepatic protein synthesis rates were measured following a primed, constant 20-hour infusion of 15N-glycine. The liver was biopsied at laparotomy. The APP response was assessed by serum C-reactive protein concentration and cytokines were assayed by a combination of immunoassay and bioassay. The patients with advanced cancer and an on-going APP response had elevated circulating IL-6 concentrations (p less than 0.01). Rates of fixed hepatic protein synthesis were 30% lower than those observed in controls (p less than 0.01). These findings demonstrate that in patients with hepatic metastasis, although the synthesis of certain acute-phase export proteins can be increased, fixed protein synthesis is reduced. Whether these changes in the distribution of hepatic protein synthesis are mediated by IL-6 will require further investigation.
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PMID:Elevated circulating interleukin-6 is associated with an acute-phase response but reduced fixed hepatic protein synthesis in patients with cancer. 189 91

In previous reports, we demonstrated that adoptively transferred T cells homed to the tumor site (among other sites) and that amplification of immune responses occurred in situ leading to the generation of cytotoxic CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) and macrophages. The present report extends these findings and shows that following adoptive immunotherapy (AIT) of mice bearing the immunogenic transplanted methylcholanthrene-induced rhabdomyosarcoma (MCA/76-9) there was a differential expansion of CD4+ and CD8+ TIL, the numbers peaking on days 6 and 8, respectively. At this time, CD8+ TIL accounted for the majority of Thy-1+ cells. Northern analyses of RNA extracted from positively selected (by panning) Thy-1+, CD8+ and CD4+ TIL isolated 8 days after AIT indicated the following: in five separate experiments, CD4+ cells expressed three- to sixfold more interleukin (IL)2 mRNA and six- to eightfold more IL6 mRNA than CD8+ cells, while CD8+ TIL expressed three- to sixfold more IL2 receptor (IL2R) mRNA and four- to sixfold more interferon-gamma mRNA than CD4+ cells. TIL cultured in 10% fetal bovine serum failed to release IL2 over a 24-h period, whereas both IL6 and interferon-gamma activities were demonstrable. The level of IL2R mRNA expression was reflected by a vigorous proliferative response of CD8+ TIL to exogenous recombinant IL2 and only a low response by CD4+ cells suggesting that most of the CD4+ TIL were in the resting stage. This was confirmed when it was shown that the incubation of panned CD4+ TIL with IL2 supplemented with irradiated spleen cells and "spent" 76-9 tumor culture supernatant (as a source of antigen) induced expansion of TIL resulting in a population consisting of greater than 90% CD4+ TIL. The overall data suggest that the relatively deactivated state of the CD4+ TIL at this particular time reflects the status of the rejection process in terms of the absence or low concentration of stimulating tumor-associated antigen.
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PMID:Differential in situ expansion and gene expression of CD4+ and CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes following adoptive immunotherapy in a murine tumor model system. 190 16

Recent studies have suggested that intestinal epithelial cells demonstrate some of the functions associated with immune competent cells. Based on these observations, we investigated whether gastrointestinal epithelial cells express Interleukin-6 (IL-6). The presence of this cytokine was tested in 53 normal and pathological tissue specimens of the human gastrointestinal tract using an immunohistochemical technique with anti-IL-6 monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies. Immunostaining shows that IL-6 is expressed in gastric and small intestinal epithelial cells. The tumor cells from a large subset (11 of 15) of colon cancer specimens were strongly immunostained. IL-6 immunostaining was less conspicuous and less frequent in the epithelial cells of normal colonic mucosa. Northern blot experiments indicated that the expression of IL-6 in colonic mucosa correlates quantitatively with the presence of its m-RNA. Furthermore, IL-6 receptor (IL-6R) m-RNA was also detected and was twice as abundant in colonic carcinoma as in normal colon. It is concluded that mucosal epithelial cells of the gastrointestinal system express IL-6 and that in the case of the colon, malignancy is accompanied by a higher expression. In addition, the presence of IL-6R transcript suggests that normal and neoplastic colonic epithelial cells might be autocrinally regulated by IL-6.
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PMID:Interleukin-6 and its receptor are expressed in human intestinal epithelial cells. 197 Jun 94

Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) are a heterogeneous population of T cells with potent antitumor activity against a wide variety of tumors. TIL from renal cell cancer (RCC) typically exhibit diminished growth and antitumor activity after four weeks in vitro. We have therefore investigated effects of varying doses of interleukin-6 (IL-6) (0, 25, 100 units/ml.) on in vitro expansion, proliferation, cytotoxicity, and expression of cell surface phenotypes of long term renal TIL cultures from three RCC patients. Among the various conditions tested, three of three TIL cultures displayed a mild increase in cell expansion when grown in IL-2 with the addition of 100 units/ml. of IL-6. Two of three TIL cultures grown in IL-2 and 100 U/ml. of IL-6 demonstrated enhanced proliferation as determined by 3H-thymidine uptake. TIL could not be isolated or maintained in vitro when grown in the presence of IL-6 alone without IL-2. IL-6 was also found to enhance the long term non-specific cytotoxicity against an allogeneic nonrenal tumor target. No consistent effect on autologous tumor-specific cytotoxicity was demonstrated. We conclude that IL-6, when used in combination with IL-2, may modestly enhance the long-term growth of RCC-derived TIL.
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PMID:The effects of interleukin-6 on tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes derived from human renal cell cancer. 199 27

Interleukin-6 is a pleiotropic cytokine with a wide range of effects, including induction of B-cell and cytotoxic T-cell differentiation, and induction of acute phase reactant production by hepatocytes. Interleukin-6 also can act as an autocrine growth factor in malignancy. Various cell types produce interleukin-6, including T and B cells, monocytes, fibroblasts, and some solid tumor cells. In previous work we detected the production of substantial amounts of interleukin-6 by human ovarian cancer cells, including the ovarian cancer cell lines CAOV-3, OVCAR-3, and SKOV-3, and several primary ovarian tumor cultures. In this study we retrospectively examined 90 separate serum specimens for interleukin-6 in 36 patients with epithelial ovarian cancer. The mean serum interleukin-6 concentration of those ovarian cancer patients with macroscopic disease (n = 57) was 0.26 +/- 0.04 U/ml (mean +/- SEM). Healthy adult donors have interleukin-6 serum levels of 0.12 +/- 0.03 U/ml. Sixteen of 21 ovarian cancer patients with macroscopic disease (76%) had elevated (greater than 0.20 U/ml) levels of serum interleukin-6, with levels approaching 1 U/ml in some patients (p less than 0.01). Of those nine patients with bulky tumor (residual greater than 2 cm), eight (89%) had an elevated interleukin-6 level (mean, 0.31 +/- 0.05), while eight of 12 (66%) with minimal residual disease (less than 2 cm) had elevated levels. Only two of 15 (13%) patients who were in clinical remission and who had microscopic disease had elevated values. Of the 36 patients, 22 were CA 125 negative (less than 35 U/ml), and of these, four had elevated interleukin-6 levels. Of the 14 patients with an elevated CA 125 level, 12 (86%) had elevated interleukin-6 levels. In those 16 patients in whom serial levels of interleukin-6 were measured, rising levels were found over a 3 to 4 month interval in nine (56%); this correlated with tumor progression. Furthermore, the subsequent survival of patients was shown to correlate with the level of interleukin-6, such that patients whose levels were elevated greater than 0.20 U/ml interleukin-6 survived a mean of 12.5 months, compared with 27.2 months for patients with normal levels (p less than 0.001). These data support the concept that interleukin-6 may be a useful tumor marker in some patients with epithelial ovarian cancer, as it correlates with the tumor burden, clinical disease status, and survival.
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PMID:Serum interleukin-6 levels correlate with disease status in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer. 201 24

The mean numbers of interphase fibrillar centers have been determined in triplicate experiments, using the argyrophil (AgNOR) method. Promonocytic U937 cells were incubated with each of three inducing agents, namely, interleukin-6, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, and the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. The cells were examined at 24, 48, and 72 h during the induction periods and their doubling time and mean AgNOR score were calculated. After 72 h, the cells were maintained in culture for a further 24 h in the absence of an inducing agent and these parameters were determined again. It was found that whereas the unstimulated U937 cells had a mean value in the region of 50 AgNORs per nucleus, this diminished to about 20 after a 72 h incubation, but rose to 30 or more when the inducing agents had been withdrawn for 24 h. These observation confirm the results of previous studies using melanoma and HL60 cell lines: however, it has now been demonstrated that a variety of agents can modulate the numbers of fibrillar centers in a very similar way in a single cell line. Furthermore, we have shown that the "undifferentiated" U937 cell AgNOR score recovers when the agents no longer act upon the cells; this implies that fibrillar center numbers are intimately related to differentiation state in cell lines, as in the case in, for example, tumor specimens.
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PMID:The effect of inducing agents on the numbers of interphase fibrillar centers in the U937 promonocytic cell line. 201 45

The effects of interleukin-6 (IL-6) in vivo were assessed by inoculating Chinese hamster ovarian (CHO) cells which were transfected with the murine IL-6 gene in nude mice. Nude mice bearing CHO cells expressing IL-6 developed hypercalcemia. Tumor-bearing mice also showed increases in white cell count, platelet count, and decreases in body weight. In nude mice carrying CHO tumors which had not been transfected with the IL-6 gene, there were no changes in these parameters. These results suggest that increased circulating concentrations of IL-6 in patients with malignant disease may contribute to a number of paraneoplastic syndromes including hypercalcemia, cachexia, leukocytosis and thrombocytosis.
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PMID:Chinese hamster ovarian cells transfected with the murine interleukin-6 gene cause hypercalcemia as well as cachexia, leukocytosis and thrombocytosis in tumor-bearing nude mice. 201 73

Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a multifunctional cytokine involved in the regulation of the terminal differentiation pathway of B lymphocytes. Recent reports revealed its potential role in the in vitro and in vivo growth of human multiple myeloma cells. The mechanism, however, by which IL-6 triggers proliferation of malignant plasma cells remains controversial. Using the very sensitive 7TD 1 bioassay we quantified endogenous circulating IL-6 levels in serum samples of 104 patients suffering from monoclonal gammopathies and other hematological disorders [47 with multiple myeloma (MM), 24 with monoclonal gammopathy of unknown significance (MGUS), 8 with myeloproliferative disease, and 25 suffering from low-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL)]. Elevated serum levels of IL-6 (greater than 5 pg/ml) were detected in 42% of the patients with MM, in 13% with MGUS, in 15% with low-grade B-NHL, and in 1 patient with T-NHL. In patients suffering from chronic myeloproliferative diseases, IL-6 levels were within the normal range. In patients with myeloma, IL-6 levels were significantly higher at advanced stages (II/III) or with progressive disease than in patients with MM stage I, MGUS, or at the plateau phase (P less than 0.01). In patients with monoclonal gammopathies including MGUS, serum IL-6 levels correlated with neopterin, tumor necrosis factor alpha and beta 2-microglobulin. An inverse correlation was found with hemoglobin levels. From these results, we propose that in myeloma patients serum IL-6 levels may reflect disease activity and tumor cell mass. The correlation with serum neopterin, a macrophage product, also suggests its origin in an activated immune system.
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PMID:Serum levels of interleukin-6 in multiple myeloma and other hematological disorders: correlation with disease activity and other prognostic parameters. 203 68

The immunomodulator Uro-Vaxom (an immunoactive fraction of E. coli, FEC) is a therapeutic agent used to control bacterial infections. FEC was applied to macrophages of C57BL/6 mice to investigate the in vitro activation of these cells of the unspecific immune system. Experiments were designed to test the secretory, immuno-regulatory and cytotoxic function of macrophages after application of FEC. As presented here, production of Interleukin-6 and tumor-necrosis-factor were significantly and dose-dependent way increased, whereas it was not possible to induce a secretion of Interleukin-1. In addition, FEC activated macrophages kill Leishmania donovani promastigotes, Candida albicans and Staphylococcus aureus. In comparison to a pressed echinaceae-preparation, FEC activated mouse macrophages secrete Interleukin-6 and tumor-necrosis-factor and kill protozoa, fungi and bacteria, with higher efficiency.
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PMID:[Immunomodulating effect of lysed immunoactive fractions of selected Escherichia coli strains on the macrophage system. An in vitro study]. 208 Sep 45


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