PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Synthesis of IL-6 by hepatocytes is a normal response to common hepatic stimuli.

  • Callie A Norris,
  • Mu He,
  • Liang-I Kang,
  • Michael Qi Ding,
  • Josiah E Radder,
  • Meagan M Haynes,
  • Yu Yang,
  • Shirish Paranjpe,
  • William C Bowen,
  • Anne Orr,
  • George K Michalopoulos,
  • Donna B Stolz,
  • Wendy M Mars

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0096053
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
p. e96053

Abstract

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Exogenous interleukin 6 (IL-6), synthesized at the initiation of the acute phase response, is considered responsible for signaling hepatocytes to produce acute phase proteins. It is widely posited that IL-6 is either delivered to the liver in an endocrine fashion from immune cells at the site of injury, or alternatively, in a paracrine manner by hepatic immune cells within the liver. A recent publication showed there was a muted IL-6 response in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-injured mice when nuclear NFκB was specifically inactivated in the hepatocytes. This indicates hepatocellular signaling is also involved in regulating the acute phase production of IL-6. Herein, we present extensive in vitro and in vivo evidence that normal hepatocytes are directly induced to synthesize IL-6 mRNAs and protein by challenge with LPS, a bacterial hepatotoxin, and by HGF, an important regulator of hepatic homeostasis. As the IL-6 receptor is found on the hepatocyte, these results reveal that induction of the acute phase response can be regulated in an autocrine as well as endocrine/paracrine fashion. Further, herein we provide data indicating that following partial hepatectomy (PHx), HGF differentially regulates IL-6 production in hepatocytes (induces) versus immune cells (suppresses), signifying disparate regulation of the cell sources involved in IL-6 production is a biologically relevant mechanism that has previously been overlooked. These findings have wide ranging ramifications regarding how we currently interpret a variety of in vivo and in vitro biological models involving elements of IL-6 signaling and the hepatic acute phase response.