Gregory S H, Wing E J, Danowski K L, van Rooijen N, Dyer K F, Tweardy D J
Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, PA 15213, USA.
J Immunol. 1998 Jun 15;160(12):6056-61.
Kupffer cells were the principal source of IL-6 produced in the livers of mice following i.v. inoculation of Listeria monocytogenes. IL-6 mRNA expression and the production of IL-6 were reduced drastically within the nonparenchymal liver cell population derived from mice rendered Kupffer cell depleted by pretreatment with liposome-encapsulated dichloromethylene diphosphonate. A sharp increase in the appearance of activated STAT3 occurred in extracts of purified hepatocytes derived from normal mice infected i.v. with Listeria. Remarkably, the kinetics of this increase overlapped IL-6 mRNA expression by Kupffer cells; each peaked at approximately 30 min postinfection. No increase in STAT3 activation was observed in IL-6-deficient or Kupffer cell-depleted animals. The results of these experiments indicate that the synthesis of IL-6 and the activation of STAT3 within hepatocytes are critical functions of Kupffer cells occurring very early during the course of systemic listerial infections.