
Kopf M, Baumann H, Freer G, Freudenberg M, Lamers M, Kishimoto T, Zinkernagel R, Bluethmann H, Kohler G:
Impaired immune and acute-phase responses in interleukin-6-deficient mice.
Nature 1994 Mar 24;368(6469):339-42
ABSTRACT
Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a multifunctional cytokine that regulates
various aspects of the immune response, acute-phase reaction and
haematopoiesis (for reviews see refs 1, 2). In vitro, leukaemia
inhibitory factor, oncostatin M, ciliary neurotrophic factor and
interleukin-11 display overlapping activities with IL-6. This
functional redundancy may be explained by the interactions of
specific binding receptors with a common signal-transducing receptor
(gp130) (for reviews see refs 3, 4). To elucidate the unique
function of IL-6 in vivo, we have disrupted the IL-6 gene by
homologous recombination. IL-6-deficient mice develop normally. They
fail to control efficiently vaccinia virus and infection with
Listeria monocytogenes, a facultative intracellular bacterium. The
T-cell-dependent antibody response against vesicular stomatitis
virus is impaired. Further, the inflammatory acute-phase response
after tissue damage or infection is severely compromised, whereas it
is only moderately affected after challenge with lipopolysaccharide.
We conclude that IL-6 production induced by injury or infection is
an important in vivo SOS signal which coordinates activities of
liver cells, macrophages and lymphocytes.