'Interleukin-6' (IL-6) is a pro-inflammatory
cytokine secreted by
T cells and
macrophages to stimulate immune response to trauma, especially burns or other tissue damage leading to inflammation. In terms of host response to a foreign pathogen, IL-6 has been shown, in mice, to be required for resistance against the bacterium, ''
Streptococcus pneumoniae''
[1]. IL-6 is also a "myokine," a cytokine produced from muscle, and is elevated in response to muscle contraction
[2]. Additionally,
osteoblasts secrete IL-6 to stimulate
osteoclast formation.
Smooth muscle cells in the
tunica media of many blood vessels also produce IL-6 as a pro-inflammatory
cytokine.
Functions of IL-6
IL-6 is one of the most important mediators of
fever and of the
acute phase response.
In the muscle and fatty tissue IL-6 stimulates energy mobilization which leads to increased body temperature. IL-6 can be secreted by
macrophages in response to specific microbial molecules, referred to as
pathogen associated molecular patterns (
PAMPs). These PAMPs bind to highly important detection molecules of the innate immune system, called Toll-like receptors (
TLRs), that are present on the cell surface (or in intracellular compartments) which induce intracellular signaling cascades that give rise to inflammatory cytokine production.
IL-6 is also essential for
hybridoma growth and is found in many supplemental cloning media such as
briclone. Inhibitors of IL-6 (including
estrogen) are used to treat postmenopausal
osteoporosis.
The IL-6 receptor
IL-6 signals through a cell-surface
type I cytokine receptor complex consisting of the ligand-binding IL-6Rα chain (
CD126), and the signal-transducing component
gp130 (also called CD130). CD130 is the common signal transducer for several cytokines including
leukemia inhibitory factor(LIF),
ciliary neurotropic factor,
oncostatin M,
IL-11 and
cardiotrophin-1, and is almost ubiquitously expressed in most tissues. In contrast, the expression of CD126 is restricted to certain tissues. As IL-6 interacts with its receptor, it triggers the gp130 and IL-6R proteins to form a complex, thus activating the receptor. These complexes bring together the
intracellular regions of gp130 to initiate a signal transduction cascade through certain
transcription factors, Janus kinases (
JAKs) and Signal Transducers and Activators of Transcription (
STATs).
IL-6 is probably the best studied of the cytokines that use gp130 in their signalling complexes. Other cytokines that signal through receptors containing gp130 are
Interleukin 11 (IL-11),
Interleukin 27 (IL-27),
ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF),
cardiotrophin-1 (CT-1),
cardiotrophin-like cytokine (CLC),
leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF),
oncostatin M (OSM),
Kaposi's sarcoma associated
herpes virus interleukin 6 like protein (
KSHV-IL6).
[3] These cytokines are commonly referred to as the ''IL-6 like'' or ''gp130 utilising'' cytokines.
In addition to the membrane-bound receptor, a soluble form of IL-6R (sIL-6R) has been purified from human serum and urine. Many neuronal cells are unresponsive to stimulation by IL-6 alone, but differentiation and survival of neuronal cells can be mediated through the action of sIL-6R. The sIL-6R/IL-6 complex can stimulate neurites outgrowth promote survival of neurons, hence may be important in nerve regeneration through remyelination.
Reference
1. Interleukin-6 gene-deficient mice show impaired defense against pneumococcal pneumonia, van der Poll T, Keogh CV, Guirao X, Buurman WA, Kopf M, Lowry SF, , , J Infect Dis, 1997
2. Contraction-induced myokine production and release: is skeletal muscle an endocrine organ?, Febbraio MA, Pedersen BK, , , Exerc Sport Sci Rev, 2005
3. Interleukin-6 family of cytokines and gp130, Kishimoto T, Akira S, Narazaki M, Taga T, , , Blood, 1995