Abstract
To determine if interleukin 4's (IL-4) recently discovered skeletal effects could be explained by its effects on osteoblasts, we have examined IL-4's impact on macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) and interleukin 6 (IL-6) secretion by the murine osteoblastic cell line MC3T3-E1. Interleukin-4 increased colony-forming activity in MC3T3 supernatants two-threefold with colony cytomorphology, cytohistochemistry, and blockade of the effect by anti-M-CSF antibody, indicating that the IL-4-induced activity was M-CSF. MC3T3 M-CSF supernatant activity increased in a time-dependent manner with positive IL-4 effects seen after a 24-hour exposure. The maximal IL-4 effective dose was 100 U/ml where conditioned media from IL-4-treated cells contained twofold more M-CSF than control cells (400 U/ml versus 200 U/ml M-CSF) as detected by a sandwich M-CSF ELISA. Northern blots showed that IL-4 (200 U/ml) rapidly increased steady-state M-CSF mRNA levels with maximal induction observed by 2 hours followed by a decline to near basal levels by 24 hours. IL-4 also dose dependently increased M-CSF mRNA levels with maximal induction (fourfold) seen at 100 U/ml IL-4. In contrast to its impact on MC3T3 M-CSF production, IL-4 (200 U/ml) did not stimulate MC3T3 IL-6 secretion whereas IL-1 (1 pM) stimulated a 500-fold increase in MC3T3 IL-6 release.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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