Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P05231 (interleukin-6)
23,907 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We examined the massive early cell death that occurs in the ventral horn of the cervical spinal cord of the chick embryo between embryonic days 4 and 5 (E4 and E5). Studies with immunohistochemical, in situ hybridization, and retrograde-tracing methods revealed that many dying cells express Islet proteins and Lim-3 mRNA (motoneuron markers) and send their axons to the somatic region of the embryo before cell death. Together, these data strongly suggest that the dying cells are somatic motoneurons. Cervical motoneurons die by apoptosis and can be rescued by treatment with cycloheximide and actinomycin D. Counts by motoneuron numbers between E3.5 and E10 revealed that, in addition to cell death between E4 and E5, motoneuron death also occur between E6 and E10 in the cervical cord. Studies with [3H]thymidine autoradiography and morphological techniques revealed that in the early cell-death phase (E4-E5), genesis of motoneurons, axonal elongation, and innervation of muscles is still ongoing. However, studies with [3H]thymidine autoradiography also revealed that the cells dying between E4 and E5 become postmitotic before E3.5. Increased size of peripheral targets, treatment with neuromuscular blockade, and treatment with partially purified muscle or brain extracts and defined neurotropic agents, such as NGF, BDNF, neurotrophin-3, CNTF, bFGF, PDGF, S100-beta, activin, cholinergic differentiation factor/leukemia inhibitory factor, bone morphogenetic protein-2, IGF-I, interleukin-6, and TGF-beta 1, were all ineffective in rescuing motoneurons dying between E4 and E5. By contrast, motoneurons that undergo programmed cell death at later stages (E6-E10) in the cervical cord are target-dependent and respond to activity blockade and trophic factors. Experimental approaches revealed that early cell death also occurs in a notochord-induced ectopic supernumerary motoneuron column in the cervical cord. Transplantation of the cervical neural tube to other segmental regions failed to alter the early death of motoneurons, whereas transplantation of other segments to the cervical region failed to induce early motoneuron death. These results suggest that the mechanisms that regulate motoneuron death in the cervical spinal cord between E4 and E5 are independent of interactions with targets. Rather, this novel type of cell death seems to be determined by signals that either are cell-autonomous or are derived from other cells within the cervical neural tube.
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PMID:A novel type of programmed neuronal death in the cervical spinal cord of the chick embryo. 864 12

Numerous purified growth factors as well as yet-unidentified neurotrophic activities within mesencephalic glia support the survival of dopaminergic neurons. To further characterize the functional role of these multiple growth factor influences in dopaminergic cell development, various purified growth factors as well as mesencephalic glial-conditioned medium (CM) were screened for effects on dopaminergic cell survival and glial numbers in serum-free low density cultures of the dissociated embryonic day (E) 15 and E17 rat mesencephalon. In E15 mesencephalic cultures, dopaminergic cell survival increased with brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), transforming growth factor alpha (TGFalpha), insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), platelet-derived growth factor-BB (PDGF-BB), and interleukin-6 (IL-6). bFGF, TGFalpha, PDGF, and IL-6 also stimulated glial proliferation as demonstrated by autoradiographic labeling for 3H-thymidine. Moreover, CM derived from the mesencephalic glial cell line Mes42 completely prevented the death of E15 dopaminergic neurons within the initial days of cultivation. In E17 mesencephalic cultures, survival-promoting effects on dopaminergic neurons were present with BDNF, GDNF, and bFGF. TGFalpha, IGF-1, PDGF-BB, and IL-6 stimulated glial proliferation but did not affect dopaminergic cell survival. Similarly, mesencephalic glial-CM completely failed to support the survival of E17 dopaminergic neurons. These observations demonstrate that during embryonic development, dopaminergic cell survival sequentially depends on distinct sets of growth factors. The concomitant loss of sensitivity of developing dopaminergic neurons for mesencephalic glial-CM as well as TGFalpha, IGF-1, PDGF-BB, and IL-6 further provides evidence that these growth factors indirectly affect early dopaminergic neurons through glial-mediated processes and suggests a crucial role of glia during the initial stages of neuronal development.
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PMID:Changing responsiveness of developing midbrain dopaminergic neurons for extracellular growth factors. 951 4

To investigate when the neurotrophic cytokines ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF), oncostatin-M (OSM), interleukin-6 (IL-6) and cardiotrophin-1 (CT-1) act on developing sensory neurones and whether they co-operate with neurotrophins in regulating neuronal survival, we studied the in vitro trophic effects of these factors on two well-characterized populations of cranial sensory neurones at closely staged intervals throughout embryonic development. The cutaneous sensory neurones of the trigeminal ganglion, which show an early, transient survival response to BDNF and NT3 before becoming NGF-dependent, were supported by CNTF, LIF, OSM and CT-1 during the late fetal period, several days after the neurones become NGF-dependent. At this stage of development, these cytokines promoted the survival of a subset of NGF-responsive neurones. The enteroceptive neurones of the nodose ganglion, which retain dependence on BDNF throughout fetal development, were supported throughout their development by CNTF, LIF, OSM and CT-1, and displayed an additional survival response to IL-6 in the late fetal period. These findings indicate that populations of sensory neurones display different developmental patterns of cytokine responsiveness and show that embryonic trigeminal neurones pass through several phases of differing neurotrophic factor survival requirements.
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PMID:Cytokines promote the survival of mouse cranial sensory neurones at different developmental stages. 974 28

The expression of a large panel of selected genes hypothesized to play a central role in post-traumatic cell death was shown to be differentially altered in response to a precisely controlled, mechanical injury applied to an organotypic slice culture of the rat brain. Within 48 h of injury, the expression of nerve growth factor messenger RNA was significantly increased whereas the levels of bcl-2, alpha-subunit of calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, cAMP response element binding protein, 65,000 mol. wt isoform of glutamate decarboxylase, 1beta isoform of protein kinase C, and ubiquitin messenger RNA were significantly decreased. Because the expression levels of a number of other messenger RNAs such as the neuron-specific amyloid precursor protein, beta(2) microglobulin, bax, bcl(xl), brain-derived neurotrophic factor, cyclooxygenase-2, interleukin-1beta, interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, receptor tyrosine kinase A, and receptor tyrosine kinase B were unaffected, these selective changes may represent components of an active and directed response of the brain initiated by mechanical trauma. Interpretation of these co-ordinated alterations suggests that mechanical injury to the central nervous system may lead to disruption of calcium homeostasis resulting in altered gene expression, an impairment of intracellular cascades responsible for trophic factor signaling, and initiation of apoptosis via multiple pathways. An understanding of these transcriptional changes may contribute to the development of novel therapeutic strategies to enhance beneficial and blunt detrimental, endogenous, post-injury response mechanisms.
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PMID:Traumatic injury induces differential expression of cell death genes in organotypic brain slice cultures determined by complementary DNA array hybridization. 1068 18

In low-density, serum-free cultures of neurons from embryonic rat dorsal root ganglia, interleukin-6 supports the survival of less than one third of the neurons yet virtually all of them bear interleukin-6 alpha-receptors. A finding that might explain this selectivity is that interleukin-6 acts on sensory neurons in culture through a mechanism requiring endogenous brain-derived neurotrophic factor. Antibodies or a trkB fusion protein that block the biological activity of brain-derived neurotrophic factor synthesized by dorsal root ganglion neurons also block the survival-promoting actions of interleukin-6 on these neurons. Two results indicate that interleukin-6 influences synthesis of brain-derived neurotrophic factor in adult dorsal root ganglion neurons. Intrathecal infusion of interleukin-6 in rats increases the concentration of brain-derived neurotrophic factor mRNA in rat lumbar dorsal root ganglia. The induction of brain-derived neurotrophic factor in dorsal root ganglion neurons that is seen after nerve injury in rats or wild-type mice is severely attenuated in mice with null mutation of the interleukin-6 gene. In brief, the ability of interleukin-6 to support the survival of embryonic sensory neurons in vitro depends upon the presence of endogenous brain-derived neurotrophic factor and the induction of brain-derived neurotrophic factor in injured adult sensory neurons depends upon the presence of endogenous interleukin-6.
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PMID:Reciprocal actions of interleukin-6 and brain-derived neurotrophic factor on rat and mouse primary sensory neurons. 1088 30

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.
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PMID:Central nervous system mechanisms contributing to the cachexia-anorexia syndrome. 1105 8

In the peripheral nervous system regeneration and gradual functional restoration occur following peripheral nerve injury. Growth of regenerating axons depends on the presence of diffusible neurotrophic factors, in addition to the substratum. Neurotrophic factors that are involved in peripheral nerve regeneration include nerve growth factor, brain-derived neurotrophic factor, ciliary neurotrophic factor, glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor, and interleukin-6. Recent functional and expression studies of basic fibroblast growth factor and its receptors have emphasized a physiological role of these molecules in the peripheral nervous system. Basic fibroblast growth factor and its receptors are constitutively expressed in dorsal root ganglia and the peripheral nerve. These molecules display an upregulation in dorsal root ganglia and in the proximal and distal nerve stumps following peripheral nerve injury. In the ganglia these molecules show a mainly neuronal expression, whereas at the lesion site of the nerve, Schwann cells and invading macrophages represent the main cellular sources of basic fibroblast growth factor and the receptors 1-3. Exogenously applied basic fibroblast growth factor mediates rescue effects on injured sensory neurons and supports neurite outgrowth of transectioned nerves. Regarding the expression patterm and the effects after exogenous administration of basic fibroblast growth factor, this molecule seems to play a physiological role during nerve regeneration. Thus, basic fibroblast growth factor could be a promising candidate to contribute to the development of new therapeutic strategies for the treatment of peripheral nerve injuries.
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PMID:The role of basic fibroblast growth factor in peripheral nerve regeneration. 1168 96

Effects of microenvironmental changes were examined in the microglial cell line BV-2. In serum supplemented medium cells were ameboid shaped and exhibited thin cytoplasmatic processes at lower concentration or in absence of serum. High levels of acetylated low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor and of phagocytic and proliferative activity were detected. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and the neuropeptide substance P (SP) induced secretion of interleukin-6. Low interleukin-3 secretion was detected only occasionally and was not influenced by LPS and SP. In defined medium, "process-bearing" cells were evident. Compared to cultures in serum supplemented medium, the cells expressed lower acetylated LDL-binding and phagocytic activity while actively proliferated, the response to LPS was reduced and to SP absent. Granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor increased the number of process-bearing cells, of acetylated LDL-binding and of IL-6 secretion induced by LPS. Cell morphology was not influenced by neurotrophins like nerve growth factor and brain-derived neurotrophic factor. The described phenotypical and functional plasticity makes the BV-2 cell line a useful model to investigate mechanisms of microglial activation.
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PMID:Effects of microenvironment on morphology and function of the microglial cell line BV-2. 1187 2

There are various neurotrophic factors, such as nerve growth factor (NGF), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) and interleukin-6 (IL-6), which are essential for the promotion of neuronal survival (prevention of apoptosis), differentiation and regeneration in the central nervous system. Neurotrophic factors, neurotrophic factor-like substances and inducers of neurotrophic factor biosynthesis have enormous therapeutic potential for serious neuronal diseases such as Alzheimer's disease or traumatic, chemical and ischemic lesions in the brain. The clarification of the mechanism in neurotrophic factor biosynthesis is important in understanding the development of the drugs that stimulate neurotrophic factor production. In this review, we describe these mechanisms in the biosynthesis of NGF, BDNF, GDNF and IL-6, and also discuss the drugs that could possibly promote neurotrophic factor biosynthesis. (c) 2002 Prous Science. All rights reserved.
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PMID:The Signaling Pathway of Neurotrophic Factor Biosynthesis. 1267 25

In inflamed tissue--including skeletal muscle--the concentrations of cytokines and neurotrophins are known to increase. However, nothing is known about a possible contribution of these agents to muscle pain and hyperalgesia. The present study investigated acute effects of cytokines and neurotrophins on response properties of slowly conducting muscle afferents. In anaesthetised rats, the impulse activity of single mechanosensitive group IV fibres innervating the gastrocnemius-soleus muscle was recorded and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-6 (IL-6), nerve growth factor (NGF), or brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) were injected into the muscle. Changes in the mechanosensibility of the endings following administration of the agents were tested with repeated pressure stimuli of defined forces. A low mechanical threshold in the innocuous range was found in 44.4% of the units tested, 55.6% required strong, potentially tissue-damaging pressure stimuli for activation. NGF excited only units that had a high mechanical threshold, while IL-6 was a stimulant for low-threshold mechanosensitive units only. TNF-alpha and BDNF did not excite group IV units but had a desensitising action: after TNF-alpha or BDNF, the response magnitudes to pressure stimuli decreased significantly. The data indicate that cytokines and neurotrophins influence the impulse activity and mechanosensitivity of group IV muscle afferent units. These effects could be of functional significance when the agents are released from muscle cells under pathophysiological circumstances.
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PMID:Excitatory and modulatory effects of inflammatory cytokines and neurotrophins on mechanosensitive group IV muscle afferents in the rat. 1573 42


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