Hyperresponsive febrile reactions to interleukin (IL) 1α and IL-1β, and altered brain cytokine mRNA and serum cytokine levels, in IL-1β-deficient mice
- Katarina Alheim*,
- Zhen Chai*,
- Giamila Fantuzzi†,
- Homa Hasanvan*,
- David Malinowsky*,
- Elena Di Santo‡,
- Pietro Ghezzi‡,
- Charles A. Dinarello†, and
- Tamas Bartfai*,§
- *Department of Neurochemistry and Neurotoxicology, Stockholm University, S-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden; †Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO 80262; and ‡Neuroimmunology Department, “Mario Negri” Institute for Pharmacological Research, 20157 Milan, Italy
Abstract
IL-1β is an endogenous pyrogen that is induced during systemic lipopolysaccharide (LPS)- or IL-1-induced fever. We have examined the fever and cytokine responses following i.p. injection of IL-1 agonists, IL-1α and IL-1β, and compared these with response to LPS (i.p.) in wild-type and IL-1β-deficient mice. The IL-1β deficient mice appear to have elevated body temperature but exhibit a normal circadian temperature cycle. Exogenously injected IL-1β, IL-1α, or LPS induced hyperresponsive fevers in the IL-1β-deficient mice. We also observed phenotypic differences between wild-type and IL-1β-deficient mice in hypothalamic basal mRNA levels for IL-1α and IL-6, but not for IL-1β-converting enzyme or IL-1 receptor type I or type II. The IL-1α mRNA levels were down-regulated, whereas the IL-6 mRNA levels were up-regulated in the hypothalamus of IL-1β-deficient mice as compared with wild-type mice. The IL-1β-deficient mice also responded to LPS challenge with significantly higher serum corticosterone and with lower serum tumor necrosis factor type α levels than the wild-type mice. The data suggest that, in the redundant cascade of proinflammatory cytokines, IL-1β plays an important but not obligatory role in fever induction by LPS or IL-1α, as well as in the induction of serum tumor necrosis factor type α and corticosterone responses either by LPS or by IL-1α or IL-1β.
Footnotes
-
↵ § To whom reprint requests should be addressed.
-
Viktor Mutt, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
- ABBREVIATIONS:
- IL,
- interleukin;
- IL-1RI and IL-1RII,
- IL-1 receptor type I and type II, respectively;
- IL-1ra,
- IL-1 receptor antagonist;
- TNFα,
- tumor necrosis factor type α;
- LPS,
- lipopolysaccharide;
- rrIL-1,
- recombinant rat IL-1;
- ICE,
- IL-1β-converting enzyme;
- 125I-rhIL-1β,
- 125I-labeled recombinant human interleukin-1β
- Copyright © 1997, The National Academy of Sciences of the USA





