Abstract
Angiogenin is a potent inducer of neovascularizationin vivo.However, like other angiogenic molecules, its specific physiologic roles and mechanisms regulating its expression remain to be elucidated. Angiogenin is a liver-derived component of normal serum whose concentration can increase in various disease states. This suggests that it might participate in the acute-phase response. In an initial study we showed that angiogenin protein and mRNA levels transiently increased in mice following an acute inflammatory stimulus. We now report that IL-6, a major inducer of acute-phase proteins, stimulates the synthesis and secretion of angiogenin protein in human HepG2 cells within 24 hr following treatment, an effect enhanced by dexamethasone. IL-6 also increases the amount of angiogenin mRNA without altering its half-life. This increase, suppressible by cycloheximide, peaks at 12 hr following stimulation and returns to basal levels by 48 hr. IL-1 alone slightly decreases the basal production of angiogenin protein and mRNA, but essentially abolishes the response to IL-6 in the absence or presence of dexamethasone. This antagonistic effect by IL-1 on IL-6 activity is not a result of changes in mRNA stability nor is it dependent on new protein synthesis. Thus, the combined effects of IL-6, IL-1, glucocorticoids, and perhaps other related factors may specifically control angiogenin expression. Since angiogenin is regulated in a manner similar to that of acute phase proteins bothin vitroandin vivo,it may play a role in the host response to injury.
Published Version
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