Inflammation-Induced IL-6 Functions as a Natural Brake on Macrophages and Limits GN |
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Authors: | Michael Luig Malte A. Kluger Boeren Goerke Matthias Meyer Anna Nosko Isabell Yan Jürgen Scheller Hans-Willi Mittrücker Stefan Rose-John Rolf A.K. Stahl Ulf Panzer Oliver M. Steinmetz |
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Affiliation: | *Medical Clinic III and;†Immunology Institute, Hamburg University Medical Center, Hamburg, Germany;;‡Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology II, Medical Faculty, Heinrich-Heine University, Düsseldorf, Germany; and;§Institute of Biochemistry, Christian-Albrechts-University, Kiel, Germany |
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Abstract: | IL-6 can mediate proinflammatory effects, and IL-6 receptor (IL-6R) blockade as a treatment for inflammatory diseases has entered clinical practice. However, opposing effects of IL-6 have been observed in models of GN. Although IL-6 is proinflammatory in murine lupus nephritis, protective effects have been observed for IL-6 in the nephrotoxic nephritis (NTN) model of acute crescentic GN. In light of the potential dangers of IL-6–directed treatment, we studied the mechanisms underlying the contradictory findings in GN. IL-6 can signal through the membrane-bound IL-6R, which is expressed only on hepatocytes and certain leukocytes (classic), or through the soluble IL-6R, which binds the ubiquitously expressed gp130 (alternative). Preemptive treatment of mice with anti-IL-6R or anti-IL-6 worsened NTN, whereas selective blockade of alternative IL-6 signaling by the fusion protein sgp130Fc did not. FACS analysis of mouse spleen cells revealed proinflammatory macrophages express the highest levels of IL-6Rα, and in vitro treatment with IL-6 blocked macrophage proliferation. Furthermore, proinflammatory macrophages were expanded during inflammation in IL-6−/− mice. Late application of anti-IL-6 after establishment of adaptive nephritogenic immunity was sufficient to aggravate NTN within 2.5 days, a period when macrophages are active. Finally, NTN was aggravated in mice with macrophage-specific impairment of IL-6 classic signaling, coincident with enhanced macrophage proliferation and accumulation in the kidney. Our data thus reveal a novel mechanism in which IL-6–mediated dampening of macrophage activation protects tissues from overshooting immune responses. This finding has important implications for potential IL-6–directed therapies and supports the careful choice of recipient patients and timing. |
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Keywords: | GN immunology pathology cytokines |
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