Cerebral interleukin-6 is neuroprotective during permanent focal cerebral ischemia in the rat

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Abstract

Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a neurotrophic cytokine expressed in both neurons and glial. The present study shows that cerebral ischemia produced by permanent occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCAO) produces a dramatic increase in IL-6 bioactivity in the ischemic hemisphere within 2 hours of MCAO (167 ± 55 IU versus sham: 50 ± 35 IU), with further increases at 8 hours (3,456 ± 1,162 IU) and 24 hours (6,088 ± 1,772 IU). In a separate series of experiments, intracerebroventricular injection of recombinant IL-6 (3,100 or 31,000 IU) significantly reduced ischemic brain damage after MCAO (to 52% and 65% of controls, respectively). The large increase in endogenous IL-6 bioactivity in response to ischemia, together with the marked neuroprotection produced by exogenous IL-6 suggest that this cytokine is an important endogenous inhibitor of neuronal death during cerebral ischemia.

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Loddick, S. A., Turnbull, A. V., & Rothwell, N. J. (1998). Cerebral interleukin-6 is neuroprotective during permanent focal cerebral ischemia in the rat. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, 18(2), 176–179. https://doi.org/10.1097/00004647-199802000-00008

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