Abstract

Human gingival fibroblasts were treated with recombinant interleukin-1 (IL-1) to determine the effect of this stimulus on the relative expression of collagenase (MMP-1), stromelysin (MMP-3) and plasminogen activator (PA) mRNA. The steady-state mRNA levels for these genes were determined on Northern blots. IL-1 induced steady-state levels of these mRNAs to different extents. Nuclear run-on transcription studies showed that IL-1 induction of neutral metalloproteinase may be transcriptionally regulated. Actinomycin D and protein kinase inhibitors decreased the mRNA production for all three metalloproteinases, whereas cycloheximide decreased the production of collagenase and stromelysin mRNA. Protein kinase inhibitors (H7/H8) decreased production of the three mRNAs to different extents. This study demonstrates a potentially important role for IL-1 in the regulation of metalloproteinase expression in human gingival fibroblasts. The ability of IL-1 to induce the expression of stromelysin, collagenase and PA may define a pivotal role for this cytokine in the pathogenesis of periodontitis.

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