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  • Title: Parathyroid hormone-related protein and interleukin-1 alpha synergistically stimulate bone resorption in vitro and increase the serum calcium concentration in mice in vivo.
    Author: Sato K, Fujii Y, Kasono K, Ozawa M, Imamura H, Kanaji Y, Kurosawa H, Tsushima T, Shizume K.
    Journal: Endocrinology; 1989 May; 124(5):2172-8. PubMed ID: 2539970.
    Abstract:
    To elucidate the mechanism of humoral hypercalcemia elicited by human esophageal carcinoma cells (EC-GI), which constitutively produced interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) and PTH-like factor, the effects of IL-1 alpha and PTH-related protein (PTH-rP) on bone resorption in vitro and on serum calcium concentrations in vivo were investigated. Nude mice transplanted with EC-GI cells invariably developed hypercalcemia, although their urinary cAMP excretion remained within the normal range. IL-1 alpha or PTH-rP-(1-34) stimulated 45Ca release from prelabeled fetal mouse forearm bones in a concentration-dependent manner, and when combined, IL-1 alpha and PTH-rP-(1-34) synergistically stimulated bone resorption in vitro. Injection of PTH-rP-(1-34) into mice three times a day for 2 days increased the serum calcium concentration in a dose-dependent manner. Continuous infusion of IL-1 alpha occasionally increased the serum calcium concentration. Simultaneous administration of IL-1 alpha at rates of 1-2.7 micrograms/day and PTH-rP-(1-34) at doses of 15-30 micrograms/day synergistically increased the serum calcium concentration in vivo. These findings suggest that PTH-rP and IL-1 alpha produced by the tumor cells were synergistically responsible for the humoral hypercalcemia observed in both the original patient and the tumor-bearing nude mice, and that at least two bone-resorbing factors [PTH-rP and another nonadenylate cyclase-stimulating bone-resorbing factor(s)] are active in patients with malignancy-associated hypercalcemia, in whom nephrogenous cAMP excretion is neither increased nor decreased.
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