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Query: UNIPROT:P05231 (
interleukin-6
)
23,907
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Interleukin-6
is one of the most well-characterized cytokines with pleiotropic properties. Besides its B-lymphocyte activation role in hematopoiesis,
interleukin-6
plays a central role in regulation of systemic inflammation.
Interleukin-6
binds to receptors on target cells (such as hepatocytes and lymphocytes), consisting of an 80 kDa binding chain and gp130, a polypeptide responsible for signal transduction. In addition to the detection of elevated amounts of
interleukin-6
in the blood, gene expression (mRNA) of subunits of the
interleukin-6
receptor complex have also been studied by examining the reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction on peripheral lymphocytes from patients with characteristic radiological symptoms suffering from Crohn's disease. Our data show significantly elevated gene expression both of the 80 kDa
interleukin-6
binding chain and gp130. These results suggest that enhancement of the expression of the constituents of
interleukin-6
and the
interleukin-6
receptor system plays a relevant role in systemic inflammation in
inflammatory bowel disease
.
...
PMID:Increased interleukin-6 levels, interleukin-6 receptor and gp130 expression in peripheral lymphocytes of patients with inflammatory bowel disease. 986 12
Oncostatin M (OM) is a member of the
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) cytokine subfamily. The binding of OM to its receptor initiates signal transduction through JAK-signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT) pathways and activates transcription activators through mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases. Results of in vitro assays documented that OM modulates cytokine expression and alters the production of proteases that down-regulate inflammation. Administration of OM to lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-challenged mice lowered serum tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) levels and decreased the lethal effects of LPS administration. OM also reduced inflammation in animal models of human disease, including
inflammatory bowel disease
, antibody-induced arthritis, and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. Preclinical safety studies have been conducted in the mouse and monkey. Mice were administered OM (subcutaneously) at 72, 360, or 1,560 micrograms/kg/day in a 2-wk toxicity study. Decreased body weights occurred at 1,560 micrograms/kg. Drug-related changes at 360 and 1,560 micrograms/kg consisted of dermal irritation at the injection site, leukopenia, and thymic lymphoid depletion; all changes were reversible following a 2-wk recovery period. In a 2-wk subcutaneous study in monkeys, OM was administered at 1, 5, 15, 45, or 150 micrograms/kg/day. At all doses there was reversible, transient inappetence and dermal irritation at the injection site. Drug-related changes at 5, 15, 45, and 150 micrograms/kg consisted of reversible elevations in both serum amyloid A and
IL-6
, and reversible thymic lymphoid depletion. Transient increases in body temperature occurred at 15, 45, and 150 micrograms/kg. The observed spectrum of immunomodulatory effects suggests that OM may have therapeutic utility in treating chronic inflammatory diseases.
...
PMID:Oncostatin M: development of a pleiotropic cytokine. 1020 78
Receptors for
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) occur in body fluids in soluble form, as well. This is an approx. 50 kDa protein with the ability to bind
IL-6
. The soluble
IL-6
receptor (sIL-6R)/
IL-6
complex can attach to membrane anchored gp130, a molecule associated with the signal transduction induced by
IL-6
and by other related cytokines. Earlier we described the appearance of sIL-6R in various body fluids of autoimmune patients. In this study using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) we isolated and characterised a truncated form of amplified cDNA reverse-transcribed from
IL-6
receptor mRNA both from human hepatoma cell line HepG2 and mononuclear cells from
inflammatory bowel disease
(
IBD
) patients. Using digestion by Pvu II restriction endonuclease and direct nucleotide sequencing we conclude that alternative splicing is likely involved in generation of sIL-6R. Our further experiments suggest that
IL-6
and recombinant sIL-6R themselves do not influence the alternative splicing of
IL-6
receptor gene.
...
PMID:Generation of 'truncated' interleukin-6 receptor (IL-6R) mRNA by alternative splicing; a possible source of soluble IL-6R. 1039 66
The cachexia-anorexia syndrome occurs in chronic pathophysiologic processes including cancer, infection with human immunodeficiency virus, bacterial and parasitic diseases,
inflammatory bowel disease
, liver disease, obstructive pulmonary disease, cardiovascular disease, and rheumatoid arthritis. Cachexia makes an organism susceptible to secondary pathologies and can result in death. Cachexia-anorexia may result from pain, depression or anxiety, hypogeusia and hyposmia, taste and food aversions, chronic nausea, vomiting, early satiety, malfunction of the gastrointestinal system (delayed digestion, malabsorption, gastric stasis and associated delayed emptying, and/or atrophic changes of the mucosa), metabolic shifts, cytokine action, production of substances by tumor cells, and/or iatrogenic causes such as chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The cachexia-anorexia syndrome also involves metabolic and immune changes (mediated by either the pathophysiologic process, i.e., tumor, or host-derived chemical factors, e.g., peptides, neurotransmitters, cytokines, and lipid-mobilizing factors) and is associated with hypertriacylglycerolemia, lipolysis, and acceleration of protein turnover. These changes result in the loss of fat mass and body protein. Increased resting energy expenditure in weight-losing cachectic patients can occur despite the reduced dietary intake, indicating a systemic dysregulation of host metabolism. During cachexia, the organism is maintained in a constant negative energy balance. This can rarely be explained by the actual energy and substrate demands by tumors in patients with cancer. Overall, the cachectic profile is significantly different than that observed during starvation. Cachexia may result not only from anorexia and a decreased caloric intake but also from malabsorption and losses from the body (ulcers, hemorrhage, effusions). In any case, the major deficit of a cachectic organism is a negative energy balance. Cytokines are proposed to participate in the development and/or progression of cachexia-anorexia; interleukin-1,
interleukin-6
(and its subfamily members such as ciliary neurotrophic factor and leukemia inhibitory factor), interferon-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor have been associated with various cachectic conditions. Controversy has focused on the requirement of increased cytokine concentrations in the circulation or other body fluids (e.g., cerebrospinal fluid) to demonstrate cytokine involvement in cachexia-anorexia. Cytokines, however, also act in paracrine, autocrine, and intracrine manners, activities that cannot be detected in the circulation. In fact, paracrine interactions represent a predominant cytokine mode of action within organs, including the brain. Data show that cytokines may be involved in cachectic-anorectic processes by being produced and by acting locally in specific brain regions. Brain synthesis of cytokines has been shown in peripheral models of cancer, peripheral inflammation, and during peripheral cytokine administration; these data support a role for brain cytokines as mediators of neurologic and neuropsychiatric manifestations of disease and in the brain-to-peripheral communication (e.g., through the autonomic nervous system). Brain mechanisms that merit significant attention in the cachexia-anorexia syndrome are those that result from interactions among cytokines, peptides/neuropeptides, and neurotransmitters. These interactions could result in additive, synergistic, or antagonistic activities and can involve modifications of transducing molecules and intracellular mediators. Thus, the data show that the cachexia-anorexia syndrome is multifactorial, and understanding the interactions between peripheral and brain mechanisms is pivotal to characterizing the underlying integrative pathophysiology of this disorder.
...
PMID:Central nervous system mechanisms contributing to the cachexia-anorexia syndrome. 1105 8
The
IL-6
gene maps to an area of chromosome 7 known to be significant for susceptibility to
inflammatory bowel disease
. The functional effects of
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) polymorphisms in the 4th intron and in the 3' flanking region of
IL-6
gene were studied in 192
inflammatory bowel disease
patients and healthy subjects. A polymerase chain reaction with sequence-specific primers (PCR-SSP) was used to determine a G to A polymorphism (* at position 4470 in intron 4 of
IL-6
gene). Four alleles in the 3' flanking region were studied using a variable number of tandem repeats PCR (VNTR-PCR) amplification. Production of
IL-6
was measured in lipopolysaccharide (LPS) stimulated whole blood samples by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). A modest increase in the frequency of the IL-6*G allele was noted in Crohn's disease (CD) patients (50%) and ulcerative colitis (UC) patients (46.1%) as compared to controls (39.8%, P = 0.025). We were unable to find any significant functional effect of the
IL-6
polymorphisms tested on
IL-6
protein production. We postulate that the
IL-6
polymorphisms investigated here may be in linkage disequilibrium with a susceptibility gene and that they may be utilised as genetic markers.
...
PMID:Is interleukin-6 important in inflammatory bowel disease? 1119 13
In the present study, the changes in circulating IGF-1 and its binding protein IGFBP-3 were determined in adult patients with active
inflammatory bowel disease
(
IBD
) in order to assess the effect of this inflammatory condition on the IGF system. IGF-1 and IGFBP-3, as well as
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) were measured in serum obtained from 22 consecutive newly diagnosed patients (mean age 41.3 years) with active
IBD
, including 10 patients with Crohn's disease (CD), and 12 with ulcerative colitis (UC). For comparison the same parameters were determined in 30 healthy volunteers matched for age, sex and Body Mass Index (BMI). Serum IGF-1 and IGFBP-3 levels were similar in the two subgroups of patients and the values from all patients were combined for comparison with those from the control group. The mean (+/- SD) serum IGF-1 concentration (178 +/- 91 ng/ml) in the patients with
IBD
was lower compared with that in the controls (227 +/- 79 ng/ml, P<0.035). Similarly, the mean IGFBP-3 concentration in the patients was lower than in the controls (1.6 +/- 0.6 ng/ml vs 3.2 +/- 0.7 ng/ml respectively, P<0.001), Serum
IL-6
levels were higher in the patients compared with the controls (5.5 +/- 4.2 vs 0.65 +/- 0.11 pg/ml, P<0.0001). The reduced IGF-1 and IGFBP-3 levels in patients with active
IBD
suggest that this systemic inflammatory condition is associated with a degree of acquired GH resistance, possibly induced by inflammatory cytokines.
...
PMID:Reduced serum insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) and IGF-binding protein-3 levels in adults with inflammatory bowel disease. 1191 23
Exaggerated cytokines productions and development of systemic inflammatory response (SIRS) is the most common cause of postoperative complications and death after major abdominal surgery. The present study was conducted to investigate alterations in systemic production of
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) and interleukin-8 (IL-8) after total parenteral nutrition (TPN) in surgical patients. Plasma concentrations of
IL-6
and IL-8 were measured in 22 patients (10 treated with TPN and 12 without TPN) before major surgery and on the days 1, 3, 7, 10 and 14-16 after, by ELISA test (indications for surgery: stomach, pancreatic and colon carcinoma, complications of
IBD
and acute pancreatitis). There were no differences between preoperative levels of
IL-6
and IL-8 in the examined groups of patients. The highest (on the days 1, 3, 7, 10: 268.3 (p = 0.002), 41.9 (p = 0.03), 122.6 (p = 0.009), 29.3 (p = 0.03) pg/ml respectively) and longer lasting significantly elevated level of
IL-6
was observed in the group of patients after major surgery without TPN. In the group of patients received TPN (with glutamine) there was a significantly increased but in comparison with group of patients without TPN, significantly lower level of
IL-6
on days 1 and 7 (103.4 and 34.7 pg/ml respectively, p = 0.01). There was no significant change in postoperative concentration of IL-8 after major surgery in the group of patients treated with TPN. The level of IL-8 was significantly elevated (p = 0.01) in the group of patients without TPN on day 1 and 3 following surgery. The IL-8 level in the TPN group vs. group of patients without TPN was significantly lower on day 1 after surgery. After TPN concentration of cholesterol was significantly higher and CRP level significantly lower. We conclude that TPN improved immunological response to major surgical trauma by reduction of the inflammatory response.
...
PMID:[Dynamic of IL-6 and IL-8 concentrations in patients after surgery treated with total parenteral nutrition]. 1195 2
Growth failure is common in children with
inflammatory bowel disease
(
IBD
) and has been attributed chiefly to undernutrition. Liquid enteral feeding can reverse the calorie deficit and increase growth velocity. The inflammatory process per se may also directly inhibit linear growth. After institution of enteral nutrition, significant changes in serum growth factors and inflammatory indices have been observed before any changes in nutritional parameters [Bannerjee et al., Gastroenterology 2000;118:A526]. In rats with trinitrobenzenesulphonic acid (TNBS)-induced colitis, about 60% of the final growth impairment can be attributed to undernutrition, inflammation accounting for the remaining growth deficit. Young patients with Crohn's disease and growth failure have normal stimulated and spontaneous growth hormone (GH) secretion and reduced plasma concentrations of insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-I), suggesting a degree of GH resistance. Rats with TNBS colitis also have normal plasma GH and reduced IGF-I concentrations, mediated by a combination of undernutrition and active inflammation. Immunoneutralization of
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
) increases hepatic IGF-I mRNA expression, plasma concentrations of IGF-I and linear growth. In contrast, administration of anti-tumour necrosis factor-alpha antibodies (TNF-ab) had no effect on IGF-I in this model. TNFab did, however, increase linear growth, suggesting inhibitory effects of TNF-alpha on the growth axis by mechanisms other than reduction in IGF-I. Preliminary data suggests that TNF-alpha inhibits maturation of growth plate chondrocytes. We have identified
IL-6
receptors on growth plate chondrocytes but to date have not identified the effect, if any, of
IL-6
directly at the growth plate.
...
PMID:Fundamental mechanisms of growth failure in inflammatory bowel disease. 1237 6
A variety of hepatobiliary abnormalities occur in inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs). The role of tight junction (TJ) in hepatobiliary complications have been well described. The purpose of this study was to investigate the role of inducible nitric oxide (NOS) in alteration of hepatocyte TJ paracellular barrier and in the rapid transcytotic vesicular pathway modification associated with intestinal inflammation. To address this question, we used an experimental model of colitis, induced by dinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (DNBS). When compared to DNBS-treated iNOS wild-type (WT) mice, DNBS-treated iNOS knock out mice (iNOSKO) mice experienced a significant less rate of the extent and severity of the histological signs of colon injury. Colon levels of the pro-inflammatory cytokines tumour necrosis factor, interleukin-1beta and
interleukin-6
were also significantly reduced in iNOS-KO mice in comparison to wild-type mice. Liver histology from iNOSKO and wild-type mice iNOSWT did not show any parenchymal and portal tract inflammation at 4 days after DNBS administration. Serum total bilirubin and alanine aminotransferase, were significantly reduced in DNBS-iNOSKO mice vs DNBS-iNOSKO mice. Therefore, we found an increase of tight junctional permeability to lanthanum nitrate (molecular weight, 433) in the livers from DNBS-treated IL-10WT mice, lanthanum accumulated throughout the junctional area up to the most apical region bordering the lumen. Absence of a functional iNOS gene in iNOSKO mice resulted in a significant reduction of apical diffusion of lanthanum after DNBS-induced colitis. Immunofluorescent labeling of frozen liver sections from DNBS-iNOSWT mice showed a significant alteration of the immunolocalization for claudin-1 and zonula occludens (ZO)-1. In contrast, a significant reduced alteration in the localization of the immunosignals for claudin-1 and ZO-1 was observed in the liver from iNOSKO mice after DNBS administration. In conclusion, we suggest that the iNOS may represent an important pathophysiological mechanism of hepatobiliary injuries and cholestasis observed in patients with
IBD
.
...
PMID:Role of iNOS in hepatocyte tight junction alteration in mouse model of experimental colitis. 1283 36
The use of biologics has promising potential in the treatment of inflammation. Studies with cultured cells and mouse models of disease have ascribed proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory functions to oncostatin M (OSM) and the related cytokine,
interleukin-6
(
IL-6
). Here, we examined the effect of systemic administration of adenoviral (Ad) vectors encoding either murine OSM (AdMuOSM) or murine
IL-6
(AdMuIL-6) in a mouse model of colitis. BALB/c mice were treated with a 5-day course of 4% dextran-sodium sulfate (DSS) water with or without administration of adenoviral vectors (i.p. or i.m. at 10(7) plaque-forming units [pfu]) given as a cotreatment or therapy. The deletion variant of the adenovirus served as a control for adenoviral infection. Colitis was assessed by (1) morphology (damage score, macrophage infiltration, apoptosis) and (2) function (myeloperoxidase activity and Ussing chamber analysis of epithelial ion transport). Infection with adenovirus alone did not affect colonic form or function. AdMuOSM (either i.p. or i.m.) significantly reduced the severity of the DSS-induced colitis. There was less damage, reduced macrophage infiltration, fewer apoptotic bodies, and a significant improvement in stimulated ion transport in colonic tissues from the treated mice. No benefit of AdMuIL-6 treatment was observed in this model system. Thus, systemic administration of AdMuOSM given as a cotreatment and to a lesser extent as a therapy was found to be of benefit in DSS-induced colitis, a murine model of
inflammatory bowel disease
(
IBD
).
...
PMID:Adenoviral transfer of the murine oncostatin M gene suppresses dextran-sodium sulfate-induced colitis. 1285 31
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