Abstract

It has been suggested that interleukin (IL)-6 plays a significant role in bladder carcinomas. We conducted the present experiment to determine whether over-expressed IL-6 enhanced the tumorigenicity of a weakly tumorigenic rat bladder carcinoma, and whether it was sufficient to induce a tumorigenic phenotype in a non-tumorigenic, anchorage-dependent rat urothelial cell line, MYP3. P3M6-10 and P3M6-12 (anchorage-independent but non-tumorigenic) and MYP3T6 (anchorage-independent and tumorigenic) were isolated from MYP3 after treatment with MNU in vitro. None of these clones produced IL-6. The cells were transfected with an expression vector containing human IL-6 cDNA. The transfectants secreted a large amount of IL-6. In MYP3T6, over-expression of IL-6 enhanced tumorigenicity markedly in nude mice, as evidenced by acceleration of the growth rate in vivo as well as of anchorage-dependent and -independent growth. In P3M6-10 and P3M6-12, the introduced IL-6 cDNA markedly enhanced their growth potential, both on a plastic surface and in soft agar, but did not induce a tumorigenic potential. In MYP3, introduced IL-6 weakly enhanced their growth on a plastic surface, but caused neither tumorigenesis in nude mice nor colony formation in soft agar. Expression of gp130, an IL-6 signal transducer, was increased in IL-6-expressing clones, especially in the P3M6-10 and MYP3T6. We conclude that acquisition of the ability to synthesize endogenous IL-6 markedly accelerates the growth rate of weakly tumorigenic rat urothelial cells, but is not sufficient to induce a tumorigenic phenotype in non-tumorigenic cells.

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