Taken together, these results delineate a key role for Hck-mediated phosphorylation of Gab1 and Gab2 docking proteins in IL-6-induced proliferation and survival of multiple myeloma cells and identify tyrosine kinases and downstream adapter proteins as potential new therapeutic targets in multiple myeloma.
A definitive separation of both putative sources for IL-6 may be difficult to achieve in fresh patient IL-6 growth requirement and production by pure myeloma cell populations using seven human myeloma cell lines (OCI-My 1 to 7) that were established from patients with advanced disease.
A crosstalk between myeloma cells and marrow stromal cells stimulates production of DKK1 and interleukin-6: a potential role in the development of lytic bone disease and tumor progression in multiple myeloma.
In this study we investigated myeloma cell apoptosis induced by IFN alpha using five human myeloma cell lines which were established without any additional supplementation of IL-6.
We identified both quantitative and qualitative changes in exosomes and exosomal miRNA, as well as inhibition of IL-6 trans-signaling, as molecular mechanisms mediating anti-MM activity.
To determine whether the receptor for IL-6 may exist as a soluble molecule, RNA was analysed from the transformed B-cell lines U266, CESS and Daudi, from bone marrow from two myeloma patients, and from normal leukocytes.
These results suggest that, among cytokines shown to control myeloma-cell growth in vitro, IL-1, IL-6 and G-CSF could play a role in the development of myeloma disease in vivo.
These data show that changes in ras or p53 can alter the myeloma cell response to IL-6 and demonstrate that the genetic background can alter therapeutic responses.
BMMCs and BMSCs from patients with MM secreted significantly more IL-6 than those from healthy donors (n = 3, P < .001); moreover, after stimulation using CD40L, IL-6 secretion was fourfold greater (n = 3, P < .001) from MM BMMCs and BMSCs than from normal BMMCs and BMSCs.
Combining MLN4924 with the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib induces synergistic apoptosis in MM cell lines which can overcome the prosurvival effects of growth factors such as interleukin-6 and insulin-like growth factor-1.
In the present study, we devised a model of IL-6 autocrine growth in vitro by transfecting IL-6 cDNA into a human myeloma cell line that had a proliferative response to IL-6 but did not produce IL-6.
These results therefore suggest that anti-Fas MoAb-induced apoptosis in MM cells is associated with activation of SAPK, and that IL-6 may both inhibit apoptosis and modulate SAPK activity.