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IL-6 undergoes transition from in vitro autocrine growth factor to in vivo growth inhibitor of B lymphoma cells

Title
IL-6 undergoes transition from in vitro autocrine growth factor to in vivo growth inhibitor of B lymphoma cells
Authors
Cho D.-H.Kang H.-S.Ma J.-J.Kim S.-S.Kim H.-M.Pyun K.-H.Choi I.
Ewha Authors
김성숙
Issue Date
1997
Journal Title
Journal of Biomedical Science
ISSN
1021-7770JCR Link
Citation
Journal of Biomedical Science vol. 4, no. 5, pp. 201 - 207
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
IL-6 is a multifunctional cytokine involved in differentiation and proliferation of immune cells. Moreover, it has diverse effects on the proliferation of tumor cells in vivo and in vitro. Although stimulating cell growth of multiple myeloma cells, it inhibits the proliferation of B16 melanoma cells and lung cancer cellS. B9.55 cells, B-cell lymphoma, are IL- 6-dependent cells, definitely requiring exogenous IL-6 for growth. When the cDNA for IL-6 was transfected into B9.55 cells, they began growing in an autocrine pattern without exogenous IL-6. To investigate the effects of IL-6 on B9.55 lymphoma in vivo, IL-6-transfected B9.55 cells (B9.G7) or neotransfected B9:55 cells (B9.vec) were injected subcutaneously into syngeneic mice. Initially, B9.G7 outgrew B9.vec, but after 3 weeks, B9.G7 grew slower than B9.vec. In addition, 5 μg of recombinant human IL-6 was injected daily into the tumor site. Reduced tumor sizes of IL-6-treated rats, similar to those observed in mice which received B9.G7, indicated that IL-6 itself is the mediator of tumor regression. When B9.G7 cells were injected into the irradiated normal mice, tumor regression was released compared with the untreated normal control, suggesting that radiosensitive host components were involved in the regression of B9.G7 cell growth. However, the tumor regression of B9.G7 cells was not released in SCID mice. Histologically, B9.G7 tumor demonstrated severe necrosis and apoptotic cells with infiltration of host inflammatory cells. Above data indicate that IL-6 functions as an autocrine growth factor for B9.G7 cells in vitro, but behaves as an autocrine inhibiting factor in vivo. These contrasting effects of IL-6 on tumor cells in vitro and in vivo will be facilitative in understanding the interaction of cytokines and host immune systems.
DOI
10.1007/BF02253419
Appears in Collections:
의과대학 > 의학과 > Journal papers
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