Interleukins and IgA synthesis. Human and murine interleukin 6 induce high rate IgA secretion in IgA-committed B cells.

Kenneth W. Beagley(University of Alabama at Birmingham), John H. Eldridge(University of Alabama at Birmingham), F Lee(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Hiroshi Kiyono(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Michael P. Everson(University of Alabama at Birmingham), William J. Koopman(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Takao Hirano(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Tadamitsu Kishimoto(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Jerry R. McGhee(University of Alabama at Birmingham)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
June 1, 1989
Cited by 453Open Access
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Abstract

Freshly isolated murine PP B cells were cultured with 10 different cytokines, including IL-1 alpha, IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, IL-7, IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, and TGF-beta, to investigate a possible role for these cytokines in induction of Ig synthesis. Of interest was the finding that only IL-5 and both mouse recombinant (mr) and human recombinant (hr) IL-6 enhanced IgA synthesis. The effect was greater with either mrIL-6 or hrIL-6 than with mrIL-5. IL-6 induced cycling mIgA+ PP B cells to secrete high levels of IgA (approximately 7-fold increase over control). Of importance was the finding that mrIL-6 had little effect on secretion of IgM or IgG by PP B cell cultures. hrIL-6 also increased IgA secretion by PP B cells and this enhancement was abolished by a goat anti-hrIL-6 antiserum. mrIL-6 did not cause B cell proliferation but induced a sharp increase in numbers of B cells secreting IgA. Isotype-switching was not a mechanism for this marked increase in IgA synthesis since mIgA- PP B cells were not induced to secrete IgA by mrIL-6. From these studies we conclude that IL-6 plays an important role in promoting the terminal differentiation of PP B cells to IgA-secreting plasma cells.


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