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Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol 296: G563-G571, 2009. First published January 8, 2009; doi:10.1152/ajpgi.90502.2008
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LIVER AND BILIARY TRACT

Transcriptional regulation of IL-6 in bile duct epithelia by extracellular ATP

Jin Yu, Nina Sheung, Elwy M. Soliman, Carlo Spirli, and Jonathan A. Dranoff

Yale University School of Medicine/Yale Liver Center, New Haven, Connecticut

Submitted 19 August 2008 ; accepted in final form 29 December 2008

The inflammatory cytokine IL-6 is essential for cell survival after liver injury. Bile duct epithelia (BDE) markedly upregulate IL-6 release after liver injury, but the mechanisms regulating this have not been defined. Purinergic signals induce multiple potent downstream effects in BDE, so the goals of this study were to determine whether extracellular ATP regulates BDE IL-6 transcription and to identify the molecular mechanisms regulating this process. Effects of extracellular nucleotides on IL-6 transcription in primary rat bile duct epithelia were assessed. The relative effects of cAMP and cytosolic calcium were determined by use of agonists and antagonists. The role of the cAMP response element (CRE) was determined by site-directed mutagenesis. We found that ATP potently upregulated IL-6 mRNA, and that the pharmacological profile for IL-6 upregulation was most consistent with the newly identified P2Y11 receptor. This occurred in a cAMP-dependent and calcium-dependent fashion. The effect of cAMP and calcium agonists on IL-6 promoter activity was synergistic, and mutation of the IL-6 CRE blocked upregulation by ATP. Taken together, these data show that extracellular ATP acts through a mechanism involving a rat P2Y receptor functionally related to the P2Y11 receptor, cAMP, and calcium signals and that the IL-6 promoter CRE to upregulate transcription of IL-6 in BDE. Since IL-6 has such critical importance in the liver, it is likely that this pathway is of great relevance to the understanding of hepatic response to injury.

purinergic signaling; interleukin-6; P2Y11; cholangiocyte



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: J. A. Dranoff, Yale Univ. School of Medicine; Section of Digestive Diseases; 333 Cedar St. LMP 1080; New Haven, CT 06510 (e-mail jonathan.dranoff{at}yale.edu)







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