Interleukin-6 Transgenic Mice and Pathogenesis of Myeloma/plasmacytoma.
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Interleukin-6 (IL-6) was originally identified as a B cell differentiation factor that induces final maturation of activated B cells into antibody-producing plasma cells. It is now known that IL-6 is a multifunctional cytokine that is produced by a wide range of cells and suggested to play important roles in host defense mechanisms.<BR>Recently, it has been suggested that deregulated expression of IL-6 is associated with the pathogenesis of plasma cell neoplasias. The growth factor for murine hybridoma/plasmacytoma was found to be identical to IL-6. Furthermore, IL-6 was shown to be a growth factor for human myeloma cells.<BR>To clarify how IL-6 plays a role in the generation of plasma cell neoplasias, transgenic mice were produced by introducing the human IL-6 gene.<BR>IL-6 transgenic mice of C57BL/6 origin developed massive polyclonal IgGi plasmacytosis, but not plasmacytomas. However, introduction of BALB/c genetic background into IL-6 transgenic mice was found to induce malignant transformation of plasma cells in about 1/3 of transgenic mice. These plasmacytoma cells were shown to be IgA plasmacytoma cells and contain the chromosomal translocation t (12; 15), which is common in pristane-induced plasmacytomas in BALB/c mice and is thought to induce the c-<I>myc</I> gene rearrangement.<BR>These data demonstrated that overexpression of the IL-6 gene could induce plasma cell neo-plasias through a polyclonal plasmacytosis in concert with a certain BALB/c genetic background.
- 公益社団法人 日本実験動物学会の論文
公益社団法人 日本実験動物学会 | 論文
- Effects of W and Sl Gene on Germ Cell Differentiation.
- Establishment of a Highly Reproducible Model of Human/Murine SCID Mouse Arthritis.
- タイトル無し
- タイトル無し
- タイトル無し