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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 (IL-6) is produced locally in working skeletal muscle and can account for the increase in plasma IL-6 during exercise. The production of IL-6 during exercise is related to the intensity and duration of the exercise, and low muscle glycogen content stimulates the production. Muscle-derived IL-6 is released into the circulation during exercise in high amounts and is likely to work in a hormone-like fashion, exerting an effect on the liver and adipose tissue, thereby contributing to the maintenance of glucose homeostasis during exercise and mediating exercise-induced lipolysis. Muscle-derived IL-6 may also work to inhibit the effects of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as tumour necrosis factor alpha. The latter cytokine is produced by adipose tissue and inflammatory cells and appears to play a pathogenetic role in insulin resistance and atherogenesis.
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PMID:Muscle-derived interleukin-6: possible biological effects. 1160 Jun 69

Bioincompatibility of peritoneal dialysis fluids (PDF) has been linked to the presence of glucose degradation products (GDP). Previous experiments have shown that short-term exposure to several GDP at concentrations found in commercially available PDF had no significant effect on human peritoneal mesothelial cells (HPMC). During continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis, however, cells are continually exposed to GDP for extended periods of time. Thus, the impact of GDP on HPMC during long-term exposure was assessed. HPMC were cultured for up to 36 d in the presence of 6 identified GDP (acetaldehyde, formaldehyde, furaldehyde, glyoxal, methylglyoxal, and 5-HMF) at doses that reflect their concentrations in conventional PDF. At regular time intervals, the ability of HPMC to secrete cytokines (interleukin-6 [IL-6]) and extracellular matrix molecules (fibronectin) was evaluated. In addition, cell viability, morphology, and proliferative potential were assessed. Exposure to GDP resulted in a significant reduction in mesothelial IL-6 and fibronectin release. Approximately 80% of this decrease occurred during the first 12 d of the exposure and was paralleled by a gradual loss of cell viability and development of morphologic alterations. After 36 d of exposure, the number of cells in GDP-treated cultures was reduced by nearly 60%. However, GDP-treated cells were able to resume normal proliferation when transferred to a normal GDP-free medium. HPMC viability and function may be impaired during long-term exposure to clinically relevant concentrations of GDP, which suggests a potential role of GDP in the pathogenesis of peritoneal membrane dysfunction during chronic peritoneal dialysis.
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PMID:Prolonged exposure to glucose degradation products impairs viability and function of human peritoneal mesothelial cells. 1167 20

In ovarian cancer patients the poor nutritional status and cachexia are caused by the metabolic effects of the enlarging tumor masses and bowel obstruction. These patients may have a high resting energy expenditure due to increase in Cori cycle activity, glucose and triglyceride-fatty acid cycling and gluconeogenesis. Biochemical mediators of cachexia include cytokines, such as tumor necrosis factor and interleukin-6, and tumor-produced catabolic factors, such as lipid-mobilizing factor, proteolysis-inducing factor, and anemia-inducing factor. Mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of obstruction may include extrinsic occlusion of the bowel due to pelvic, mesenteric omental masses, or intestinal motility disorders due to infilor tration of the mesentery or bowel muscle and nerves. The relief of malnutrition and cachexia may be attempted through nutritional support, pharmacological approach (megestrol acetate, cyclooxygenase inhibitors) and palliative treatment of bowel obstruction. Very few agents have been demonstrated to have true anticachectic activity, so future research should be addressed to the identification of drugs able to block the activity of tumor-produced catabolic factors. The decision regarding optimum management of bowel obstruction should be individualized. Krebs' and Goplerud's score (based on age, nutritional status, tumor status, ascites, previous chemotherapy and irradiation) seems to offer reliable eligibility criteria for those patients who can benefit from surgery.
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PMID:Malnutrition and cachexia in ovarian cancer patients: pathophysiology and management. 1171 91

Recent work has established that Kupffer cell products, including prostaglandins, can act directly on hepatocytes to modify glucose and lipid metabolism. Additionally, prostaglandins can act on Kupffer cells to modify the expression of cytokines. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) stimulate hepatic lipogenesis following in vivo administration. To define the direct effects of these cytokines on lipogenesis in primary culture rat hepatocytes, hepatocytes were cultured in the presence of IL-6 or TNF-alpha for periods of 24--72 h. IL-6 caused an increase in hepatocyte lipogenic capacity (56% increase by 12.5 ng ml(minus sign1) IL-6 after 72 h of cytokine exposure). The increase in cellular lipogenic capacity was confirmed using (3)H2O as the radiotracer. TNF-alpha did not increase the rate of hepatocyte lipogenesis. Neither IL-6 nor TNF-alpha modified rates of lipogenesis upon acute exposure to the cytokine. Misoprostol-free acid (0.1 &mgr;M) acutely increased hepatocyte lipogenic rates by 14% in the presence of glucagon. These results demonstrate that IL-6 can act directly on hepatocytes to induce lipogenic capacity and that E-series prostaglandins can antagonize the acute inhibition of lipogenesis by glucagon. Because IL-6 is produced by Kupffer cells, and its expression is modulated by prostaglandins, the Kupffer cell is a novel target for prostaglandin therapy. Administration of prostaglandins may provide a novel strategy for pharmacologic therapy of disorders of glucose or lipid metabolism.
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PMID:Stimulation of Lipogenesis by Interleukin-6 and Misoprostol-Free Acid in Isolated Rat Hepatocytes. 1185 48

Plasma osteocalcin, a marker of osteoblastic activity, decreases after major abdominal and gynaecological surgery. Increased cortisol secretion and other hormonal and inflammatory components of the peri-operative stress response may play a role in mediating this response. We assessed the effects of three different anaesthetic techniques on peri-operative osteocalcin concentrations. Thirty-six female patients undergoing elective total hip replacement were randomly assigned to receive propofol, propofol plus 'three-in-one' block or etomidate as part of a general anaesthetic technique. We measured plasma osteocalcin and serum cortisol, bone specific alkaline phosphatase, interleukin-6, plasma epinephrine, norepinephrine, plasma glucose and cystatin C concentrations for up to 3 days after surgery. Etomidate successfully inhibited the cortisol response to surgery but plasma osteocalcin declined in all patients. This was accompanied by increased plasma catecholamines, interleukin-6 and glucose concentrations, and decreased cystatin C-values. Inhibition of the cortisol response to surgery failed to prevent a decrease in plasma osteocalcin concentrations after surgery, suggesting that other factors such as cytokines or catecholamines may play a significant role.
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PMID:Osteocalcin and the hormonal, inflammatory and metabolic response to major orthopaedic surgery. 1193 88

Type 2 diabetes is associated with biochemical evidence of low-grade inflammation, and experimental studies have suggested that both insulin and glucose affect inflammatory responses. To determine the effect of in vivo changes in glucose availability and plasma insulin concentrations in humans, we administered 20 U/kg Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or saline (control) to 14 subjects during a euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp (n = 6) or an infusion of sterile saline (n = 8). Parallel in vitro studies on human whole blood were undertaken to determine whether there was a direct effect of glucose, insulin, and leptin on proinflammatory cytokine production. Infusion of glucose and insulin significantly amplified and/or prolonged the cardiovascular, plasma interleukin-6 (IL-6), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and counterregulatory hormone responses to LPS, whereas the effects on fever, plasma norepinephrine concentrations, and oxygen consumption were unaffected. In vitro studies showed no modulation of LPS-stimulated IL-6 or TNF-alpha production by glucose, insulin, or leptin at physiologically relevant concentrations. Hyperinsulinemia indirectly enhances key components of the systemic inflammatory and stress responses in this human model of infection.
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PMID:Euglycemic hyperinsulinemia augments the cytokine and endocrine responses to endotoxin in humans. 1200 57

This study was undertaken to review the links between maternal nutrition, offspring's birth weight and the propensity to early insulin resistance and high diabetes rates in Indian adults. Studies included a comparison of maternal size and nutrition with birth weights in Pune, India, and Southampton, UK. In Pune, the growth, insulin resistance and blood pressure of four-year-old children were assessed. Adults >40 years of age, who were resident in rural areas, were compared with adults living in urban areas for size, glucose handling, lipid status and blood pressure. Newly diagnosed diabetic adults living in urban areas were also monitored. Height, weight, head, waist and hip circumferences, skin-fold measurements and blood pressure were routinely measured. Fasting glucose, insulin, total and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides were linked to the glucose and insulin responses during glucose tolerance tests. Cytokine levels were measured in plasma samples of urban and rural adults. Indian babies were lighter, thinner, shorter and had a relatively lower lean tissue mass than the Caucasian babies. However, the subcutaneous fat measurements of these babies were comparable to those of the white Caucasian babies. The Indian mothers were small, but relatively fat mothers produced larger babies. Maternal intake of green vegetables, fruit and milk, and their circulating folate and vitamin C levels, predicted larger fetal size. Rapid childhood growth promoted insulin resistance and higher blood pressure. Rural adults were thin, with a 4% prevalence of diabetes and a 14% prevalence of hypertension, but the risks increased within the normal body mass index (BMI) range. Type 2 diabetes was common in urban adults younger than 35 years of age. Although the average BMI was 23.9 kg m(-2), central obesity and thin limbs were noteworthy. Levels of interleukin-6 and tumour necrosis factor-a were markedly increased in urban dwellers. Hence, there is evidence of a remarkably powerful, intergenerational effect on body size and total and central adiposity. Indians are highly susceptible to insulin resistance and cardiovascular risks, with babies being born small but relatively fat. Insulin resistance is amplified by rapid childhood growth. Dietary factors seem to have profound long-term metabolic influences in pregnancy. Overcrowding with infections and central obesity may amplify cytokine-induced insulin resistance and early diabetes in Indian adults with a low BMI.
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PMID:The lifecycle effects of nutrition and body size on adult adiposity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease. 1216 75

Interleukin-6 (IL-6) was infused intravenously for 2.5 h in seven healthy human volunteers at a dose giving rise to a circulating IL-6 concentration of approximately 35 ng l(-1). The metabolic effects of this infusion were studied in subcutaneous adipose tissue on the anterior abdominal wall and in the splanchnic tissues by the Fick principle after catheterizations of an artery, a subcutaneous vein draining adipose tissue, and a hepatic vein, and measurements of regional adipose tissue and splanchnic blood flows. In control studies without IL-6 infusion subcutaneous adipose tissue metabolism was studied by the same technique in eight healthy subjects. The net release of glycerol and fatty acids from the subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue remained constant in the control experiment. IL-6 infusion gave rise to increase in net glycerol release in subcutaneous adipose tissue while the net release of fatty acids did not change significantly. In the splanchnic region IL-6 elicited a pronounced vasodilatation, and the uptake of fatty acids and the gluconeogenic precursors glycerol and lactate increased significantly. The splanchnic net output of glucose and triacylglycerol did not change during the IL-6 infusion. It is concluded that IL-6 elicits lipolytic effects in human adipose tissue in vivo, and that IL-6 also has effects on the splanchnic lipid and carbohydrate metabolism.
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PMID:Metabolic effects of interleukin-6 in human splanchnic and adipose tissue. 1218 8

Ingesting carbohydrate (CHO) beverages during prolonged, continuous heavy exercise results in smaller changes in the plasma concentrations of several cytokines and attenuates a decline in neutrophil function. In contrast, ingesting CHO during prolonged intermittent exercise appears to have negligible influence on these responses, probably due to the overall moderate intensity of these intermittent exercise protocols. Therefore, we examine the effect of CHO ingestion on plasma interleukin-6 (IL-6), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated neutrophil degranulation responses to high-intensity intermittent running. Six trained male soccer players performed 2 exercise trials, 7 days apart, in a randomized, counterbalanced design. On each occasion, they completed six 15-min periods of intermittent running consisting of maximal sprinting interspersed with less intense periods of running and walking. Subjects consumed either CHO or artificially sweetened placebo (PLA) beverages immediately before and at 15-min intervals during the exercise. At 30 min post-exercise, CHO versus PLA was associated with a higher plasma glucose concentration (p < .01), a lower plasma cortisol and IL-6 concentration (p < .02), and fewer numbers of circulating neutrophils (p < .05). Following the exercise, LPS-stimulated elastase release per neutrophil fell 31% below baseline values on the PLA trial (p = .06) compared with 17% on the CHO trial (p = .30). Plasma TNF-alpha concentration increased following the exercise (main effect of time, p < .001) but was not affected by CHO. These data indicate that CHO ingestion attenuates changes in plasma IL-6 concentration, neutrophil trafficking, and LPS-stimulated neutrophil degranulation in response to intermittent exercise that involves bouts of very high intensity exercise.
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PMID:Influence of carbohydrate supplementation on plasma cytokine and neutrophil degranulation responses to high intensity intermittent exercise. 1218 15

Murine hepatic cytochrome P450 2a5 (Cyp2a5) is induced during hepatotoxicity and hepatitis, however, the specific regulatory mechanisms have not been determined. We compared the influence of acute inflammation elicited in vivo by bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and liver injury caused by the hepatotoxin pyrazole on hepatic Cyp2a5 expression in mice. Pyrazole treatment resulted in statistically significant increases in levels of Cyp2a5 mRNA, protein and catalytic activity by 540, 273 and 711%, respectively (P<0.05). In LPS-treated livers Cyp2a5 expression was significantly reduced compared to controls at the mRNA (46%) protein (35%), and activity (23%) levels (P<0.05). Treatment of mice with recombinant murine interleukin-1 beta and interleukin-6 had no significant effect on Cyp2a5 mRNA and protein levels. Liver injury, as assessed by serum alanine aminotransferase, was greater with pyrazole than with LPS treatment (609 vs 354% of control levels respectively). ER stress, determined by hepatic glucose regulated protein 78 (grp78) levels, was greater with pyrazole (185% of controls) than with LPS (128% of controls). In pyrazole-treated liver, overexpression of immunoreactive grp78 protein revealed that ER stress was localized to pericentral hepatocytes in which Cyp2a5 was induced. Evidence of glycogen loss and membrane damage in these cells was suggestive of oxidative damage. Moreover, vitamin E attenuated Cyp2a5 induction by pyrazole in vivo. These results suggest that induction of Cyp2a5 that has been observed in mouse models of hepatitis and hepatoxicity may be related to oxidative injury to the endoplasmic reticulum of pericentral hepatocytes rather than exposure to pro-inflammatory cytokines.
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PMID:Effects of lipopolysaccharide-stimulated inflammation and pyrazole-mediated hepatocellular injury on mouse hepatic Cyp2a5 expression. 1249 23


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