MELANOMA-DERIVED INTERLEUKIN-6 INHIBITS IN-VIVO MELANOMA GROWTH

Citation
Ca. Armstrong et al., MELANOMA-DERIVED INTERLEUKIN-6 INHIBITS IN-VIVO MELANOMA GROWTH, Journal of investigative dermatology, 102(3), 1994, pp. 278-284
Citations number
43
Categorie Soggetti
Dermatology & Venereal Diseases
ISSN journal
0022202X
Volume
102
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
278 - 284
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-202X(1994)102:3<278:MIIIMG>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
Malignant melanomas are capable of producing a wide range of cytokines with multiple biologic functions, including interleukin 6 (IL-6). We have observed an inverse relationship between IL-6 production of three B16-derived murine melanoma cell lines (NP133, HFH18, and HFH(M)) and the tumorigenicity of these melanoma cells in syngeneic mice. To furt her test the effect of IL-6 on melanoma growth, a non-IL-6-producing m urine B16-derived melanoma cell line (HFH18) was transfected with a mu rine IL-6 expression vector, resulting in stable transfectants (HFH18/ IL-6(+)) that expressed significant amounts of IL-6 mRNA and secreted high levels of bioactive IL-6. Syngeneic C57BL/6 mice inoculated subcu taneously with HFH18/IL-6(+) cells developed tumors that reached a fin al mean diameter of less than half the size of tumors that developed i n mice inoculated with either HFH18 parental or HFH18 cells transfecte d with the IL-6 cDNA in the non-coding 3'-5' orientation (HFH18/IL-6(- ) cells). In addition, mice bearing IL-6-producing HFH18/IL-6(+) tumor s survived twice as long as mice bearing HFH18 parental or HFH18/IL-6( -) tumors. The specificity of melanoma growth inhibition by IL-6 was c onfirmed by the reversal of the slow-growing phenotype of HFH18/IL-6() cells by local peritumoral administration of neutralizing alpha-muri ne IL-6 antibody. IL-6-producing melanoma cells exerted a growth-inhib itory effect on distant parental tumors in a dose-dependent manner. Th e growth of HFH18/IL-6(+) melanomas was also decreased in nude mice, s uggesting that melanoma-derived IL-6 may mediate this anti-tumor effec t independently of a normal host B- and T-cell immune response. Thus, melanoma-derived IL-6 exerts a significant inhibitory effect on cutane ous melanoma growth and progression. These results indicate that melan oma cytokines may have a profound effect on tumor pathogenesis.