ENDOGENOUSLY PRODUCED INTERLEUKIN-6 IS AN ACCESSORY CYTOKINE FOR DENDRITIC CELL HEMATOPOIESIS

Citation
F. Santiagoschwarz et al., ENDOGENOUSLY PRODUCED INTERLEUKIN-6 IS AN ACCESSORY CYTOKINE FOR DENDRITIC CELL HEMATOPOIESIS, Stem cells, 14(2), 1996, pp. 225-231
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Cell Biology","Biothechnology & Applied Migrobiology
Journal title
ISSN journal
10665099
Volume
14
Issue
2
Year of publication
1996
Pages
225 - 231
Database
ISI
SICI code
1066-5099(1996)14:2<225:EPIIAA>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the role of interleukin 6 (IL -6) in normal dendritic cell (DC) hematopoiesis, We used an enzyme-lin ked immunosorbent assay to quantitate IL-6 levels in CD34(+) progenito r cell cultures favoring monocyte (mono) development versus those supp orting mono-DC growth, and studied the neutralizing effects of alpha I L-6 antibody on DC hematopoiesis. IL-6 levels in mono cultures (GM-CSF alone) were detected by day 4 and remained constant (similar to 100 p g/ml) for 18 days, In mono-DC cultures, higher IL-6 levels correlated with DC content and development, Short-term mono-DC cultures initiated with GM-CSF + tumor necrosis factor (TNF) + stem cell factor (SCF) ex hibited increases in IL-6 levels until day 11 (peak DC growth), By day 18, the levels had declined and cells expressing typical DC features were no longer present, Long-term mono-DC cultures sustained with GM-C SF + TNF + SCF contained the highest IL-6 levels (671 pg/ml) on day 11 , In these cultures, DCs and higher IL-6 levels persisted beyond 18 da ys. Anti-IL-6 profoundly inhibited cell proliferation associated with DC hematopoiesis when added on days 0, 2 and 5 to GM-CSF + TNF + SCF c ultures, indicating that various stages of mono-DC development rely on IL-6, There was no reduction in the T cell response when alpha IL-6 w as added to mixed leukocyte reaction cultures containing mature DCs as stimulators. Thus, alpha IL-6 appears to downregulate developmental p rocesses associated with optimal mono-DC growth, but not the effector functions of mature DCs. These studies substantiate the importance of IL-6 as a secondary cytokine during DC development and provide insight into another control point in the DC pathway.