Abstract
BackgroundBone marrow stromal cells produce cytokines required for the normal growth and development of all eight hematopoietic cell lineages. Aberrant cytokine production by stromal cells contributes to blood cell dyscrasias. Consequently, factors that alter stromal cell cytokine production may significantly compromise the development of normal blood cells. We have shown that environmental chemicals, such as aromatic hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) agonists, suppress B lymphopoiesis by modulating bone marrow stromal cell function. Here, we extend these studies to evaluate the potential for two prototypic AhR agonists, 7,12-dimethylbenz [a]anthracene (DMBA) and 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), to alter stromal cell cytokine responses.MethodsBone marrow stromal cells were treated with AhR agonists and bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to mimic innate inflammatory cytokine responses and to study the effects of AhR ligands on those responses. Steady state cytokine RNA levels were screened by RNAse protection assays (RPA) and quantified by real-time PCR. Cytokine (IL-6) protein production was measured by ELISA. NF-κB EMSAs were used to study IL-6 transcriptional regulation.ResultsRPAs indicated that AhR+ bone marrow stromal cells consistently up-regulated genes encoding IL-6 and LIF in response to LPS, presumably through activation of Toll-like receptor 4. Pre-treatment with low doses of DMBA or TCDD selectively abrogated IL-6 gene induction but had no effect on LIF mRNA. Real-time-PCR indicated a significant inhibition of IL-6 mRNA by AhR ligands within 1 hour of LPS challenge which was reflected in a profound down-regulation of IL-6 protein induction, with DMBA and TCDD suppressing IL-6 levels as much as 65% and 88%, respectively. This potent inhibitory effect persisted for at least 72 hours. EMSAs measuring NF-κB binding to IL-6 promoter sequences, an event known to induce IL-6 transcription, indicated a significant decrease in the LPS-mediated induction of DNA-binding RelA/p50 and c-Rel/p50 heterodimers in the presence of DMBA.ConclusionsCommon environmental AhR agonists can suppress the response to bacterial lipopolysaccharide, a model for innate inflammatory responses, through down-regulation of IL-6, a cytokine critical to the growth of several hematopoietic cell subsets, including early B cells. This suppression occurs at least at the level of IL-6 gene transcription and may be regulated by NF-κB.
Highlights
Bone marrow stromal cells produce cytokines required for the normal growth and development of all eight hematopoietic cell lineages
We demonstrated that cloned bone marrow stromal cell lines, including BMS2 cells, support the growth of primary preB and cloned pro/pre-B cells and that treatment of the bone marrow stromal cells with aromatic hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) agonists alters their function [28,29,30,32,33,34,52]
As a first step in determining if AhR ligands affect stromal cell cytokine production, baseline levels of cytokine mRNAs in BMS2 cells were determined by RNAse protection assays
Summary
Bone marrow stromal cells produce cytokines required for the normal growth and development of all eight hematopoietic cell lineages. Bone marrow stromal cells support the growth and development of all eight hematopoietic cell lineages through cell-cell contact and the production of soluble cytokines [1,2] This process generally is well-regulated by both adhesion molecules and receptor/ligand pairs, aberrant stromal cell-blood cell interactions have been documented and are associated with a variety of diseases that involve abnormal growth and development of blood cells [3,4,5]. IL-6 is emerging as an important survival and angiogenesis factor in other cancers, including basal cell carcinoma, prostate cancer, and Kaposi's carcinoma [23,24,25] These studies illustrate the importance of IL-6 regulation in normal cell function and suggest that any modulation of its expression could have important pathologic consequences
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