Abstract

The inhibitory effect of murine interferon gamma (muIFN gamma) on humoral hypercalcemia in nude mice bearing lower-jaw cancer (LJC-1-JCK), in which parathyroid-hormone(PTH)-related protein is responsible for causing humoral hypercalcemia by activating bone resorption, was examined in comparison with that of a new bisphosphonate, 4-amino-1-hydroxybutylidene-1,1-bisphosphonate (alendronate). muIFN gamma was injected into tumor-bearing nude mice for 5 days before the establishment of hypercalcemia. The increase of plasma calcium concentration was delayed and this effect continued for more than 6 days even after the injection was stopped. Alendronate markedly suppressed hypercalcemia in tumor-bearing nude mice but this inhibitory effect continued for less than 6 days. Neither muIFN gamma nor alendronate affected the tumor volume or serum PTH-related protein concentration. Injection of muIFN gamma into mice for 3 days almost completely abolished the formation of multinucleated osteoclast-like cells from bone marrow cells in vitro, whereas injection of alendronate into mice had no effect. These findings suggested that muIFN gamma suppressed the formation of osteoclasts, resulting in the prolonged decrease of plasma calcium concentration in hypercalcemic tumor-bearing nude mice, whereas alendronate is cytotoxic to functionally mature osteoclasts and inhibited osteoclastic bone resorption, resulting in a marked decrease in the plasma calcium concentration in tumor-bearing hypercalcemic nude mice.

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