Abstract
Interleukin-4 (IL-4) potently inhibits bone resorption by preventing the differentiation of osteoclast precursors to osteoclasts. To elucidate the role of IL-4 in bone formation, we studied the effects of human IL-4 on human osteoblast-like cells obtained from trabecular bone, which showed increased osteocalcin production in response to l,25-(OH) 2D 3 in more than 10 passages. IL-4 stimulated the proliferation of osteoblast-like cells in a concentration-dependent manner, showing the minimal and maximal stimulatory effects at 10 pg/ml and 100–1000 pg/ml, respectively. IL-4 also stimulated the expression of alkaline phosphatase mRNA (1.7-fold) and the enzyme activity to the same extent at 10–100 pg/ml. Furthermore, IL-4 stimulated collagen type I mRNA expression in human osteoblast-like cells. The cytokine did not affect osteocalcin production in a short culture period (3 days). These in vitro findings suggest that IL-4, a bone-resorption-inhibitory cytokine produced by activated T cells in bone marrow, may exert an anabolic effect on osteoblast-like cells in trabecular bone through a paracrine mechanism.
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