Title of article :
Viral Interleukin 6 Stimulates Human Peripheral Blood B Cells That Are Unresponsive to Human Interleukin 6
Author/Authors :
Breen، نويسنده , , Elizabeth C. and Gage، نويسنده , , Julia R. and Guo، نويسنده , , Beichu and Magpantay، نويسنده , , Larry and Narazaki، نويسنده , , Masashi and Kishimoto، نويسنده , , Tadamitsu and Miles، نويسنده , , Steve and Martيnez-Maza، نويسنده , , Otoniel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Abstract :
Cellular responsiveness to human interleukin 6 (hIL6) requires the expression of two receptor molecules: IL6-specific receptor (CD126′IL6R′) and a nonspecific signal-transducing molecule (CD130′gp130′). Regulation of responsiveness to hIL6 is generally controlled by CD126′IL6R′ expression. A viral homologue of hIL6 (vIL6) is encoded by human herpesvirus-8 and has biologic activity similar to hIL6 on a number of cell lines. vIL6 differs from hIL6 in its receptor utilization, requiring only CD130′gp130′. Total human B cells isolated from peripheral blood, which are predominantly CD126′IL6R′-negative, as well as sorted CD126′IL6R′-negative B cells, could be stimulated by recombinant vIL6, but not by hIL6, as indicated by induction of IL6-like signaling (STAT3 phosphorylation). This suggests that the ability of vIL6 to stimulate B cells expressing little or no CD126′IL6R′ allows it to act on a larger pool of target B cells, compared to human IL6.
Keywords :
B cell , IL6 , vIL6 , CD126?IL6R? , CD130?gp130? , HHV-8 , cytokine , human , activation
Journal title :
Cellular Immunology
Journal title :
Cellular Immunology