| Literature DB >> 22475191 |
Hiroyasu Nagakawa1, Osamu Shimozato, Ling Yu, Akihiko Wada, Kiyoko Kawamura, Quanhai Li, Sunil Chada, Yuji Tada, Yuichi Takiguchi, Koichiro Tatsumi, Masatoshi Tagawa.
Abstract
Expression of human interleukin (IL)-24 in tumors achieved anti-tumor effects through apoptosis. IL-24 also induced secretion of proinflammatory cytokines, suggesting the role in immunity. We showed that murine IL-24 transcripts started from the second initiation codon and that expressed mIL-24 in tumors failed to induce apoptosis. Proliferation of murine cells expressing mIL-24 was the same as that of the parent cells and inoculation of the mIL-24-expressing tumors into syngeneic mice did not produce anti-tumor effects. Secretory mIL-24 did not induce the expression of the IL-6, TNF-α or IFN-γ gene in spleen cells. Expression of mIL-24 receptor subunits, IL-22R and IL-20R1, was undetectable in spleen cells even though they were stimulated by anti-CD3, anti-CD40 antibody or concanavalin A. Transduction of murine tumors with adenoviruses expressing the human IL-24 gene however suppressed the viability and decreased the tumor growth. These data suggest that mIL-24 is functionally irrelevant to the human counterpart.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22475191 DOI: 10.1016/j.cellimm.2012.02.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Immunol ISSN: 0008-8749 Impact factor: 4.868