Abstract

We determined that exposure of cultured lung fibroblasts (HEL-299) to recombinant human interleukin-6 (0–400 ng/ml) resulted in a dose- and time-dependent increase in secreted and cell lysate PAI-1 and total tPA levels (maximal increase of 2.6-fold and 1.7-fold, respectively). Specificity of this response was indicated when increases in PAI-1 levels were inhibited by neutralizing polyclonal antibodies to IL-6, but not with non-specific antibodies. Inhibition of the response to IL-6 by cycloheximide and α-amanitin indicates that increases in PAI-1 are dependent on both protein and RNA synthesis. The addition of IL-6 to HEL-299 cells also stimulated a dose- and time-dependent increase in steady-state PAI-1 mRNA levels (3.8 to 15.1 pg/μg total RNA by 24 h). A rapid increase (5–6-fold) in PAI-1 mRNA levels was found between 3 and 12 h. Nuclear run-on assays using a maximum dose of IL-6 showed that IL-6 increases a 4-fold rate of transcription of the PAI-1 gene. We further showed that LPS induces a 70% increase in secreted IL-6 and a 50% increase in PAI-1 protein levels. Increasing doses of anti-IL-6 completely blocked the effect of LPS on PAI-1 while non-specific antibodies had no effect. These studies suggest an autocrine role for IL-6 in regulating localized proteolysis and modulating tissue remodeling during acute inflammatory conditions by fibroblasts.

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