Literature DB >> 10945502

Interleukin-15 antagonizes muscle protein waste in tumour-bearing rats.

N Carbó1, J López-Soriano, P Costelli, S Busquets, B Alvarez, F M Baccino, L S Quinn, F J López-Soriano, J M Argilés.   

Abstract

Tissue protein hypercatabolism (TPH) is an important feature in cancer cachexia, particularly with regard to the skeletal muscle. The Yoshida AH-130 rat ascites hepatoma is a model system for studying the mechanisms involved in the processes that lead to tissue depletion, since it induces in the host a rapid and progressive muscle wasting, primarily due to TPH. The present study was aimed at investigating if IL-15, which is known to favour muscle fibre hypertrophy, could antagonize the enhanced muscle protein breakdown in this cancer cachexia model. Indeed, IL-15 treatment partly inhibited skeletal muscle wasting in AH-130-bearing rats by decreasing (8-fold) protein degradative rates (as measured by 14C-bicarbonate pre-loading of muscle proteins) to values even lower than those observed in non-tumour-bearing animals. These alterations in protein breakdown rates were associated with an inhibition of the ATP-ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic pathway (35% and 41% for 2.4 and 1.2 kb ubiquitin mRNA, and 57% for the C8 proteasome subunit, respectively). The cytokine did not modify the plasma levels of corticosterone and insulin in the tumour hosts. The present data give new insights into the mechanisms by which IL-15 exerts its preventive effect on muscle protein wasting and seem to warrant the implementation of experimental protocols involving the use of the cytokine in the treatment of pathological states characterized by TPH, particularly in skeletal muscle, such as in the present model of cancer cachexia.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10945502      PMCID: PMC2374658          DOI: 10.1054/bjoc.2000.1299

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Cancer        ISSN: 0007-0920            Impact factor:   7.640


  52 in total

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  44 in total

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3.  The role of Interleukin 15 in protein degradation in skeletal muscles in rats of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

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5.  Interleukin-15 administration improves diaphragm muscle pathology and function in dystrophic mdx mice.

Authors:  Leah J Harcourt; Anna Greer Holmes; Paul Gregorevic; Jonathan D Schertzer; Nicole Stupka; David R Plant; Gordon S Lynch
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Review 7.  From anabolic to oxidative: reconsidering the roles of IL-15 and IL-15Rα in skeletal muscle.

Authors:  Emidio E Pistilli; Lebris S Quinn
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8.  Role of NF-kappaB and cytokine in experimental cancer cachexia.

Authors:  Wei Zhou; Zhi-Wei Jiang; Jie Tian; Jun Jiang; Ning Li; Jie-Shou Li
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