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Endocrinology, Vol 131, 5-13, Copyright © 1992 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Inhibition by human interleukin-1 alpha of parathyroid hormone-related peptide effects on renal calcium and phosphorus metabolism in the rat

O Torring, RT Turner, WB Carter, AF Firek, CA Jacobs and H Health 3d
Endocrine Research Unit, Mayo Clinic Rochester, Minnesota 55905.

Humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy (HHM) is at least partly caused by tumor secretion of PTH-related peptide (PTHrP), but there is growing evidence for cosecretion with PTHrP of other bone-resorbing peptides, such as the cytokine interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha). Administration of PTHrP in vivo and in vitro generally mimics the actions of PTH itself, with increases in both resorption and formation of bone. However, bone in HHM is characterized by uncoupling of bone turnover, with increased resorption and decreased formation. We performed experiments to determine whether IL-1 alpha might alter the effects of PTHrP and produce uncoupling. Thus, we administered to 100-g male rats by sc osmotic minipumps synthetic PTHrP-(1-34) alone (2 micrograms/100 g/day), recombinant IL-1 alpha alone (1.5 micrograms/100 g/day), both peptides together at the previous doses, or vehicle only. We infused 5 groups of 12 rats each (PTHrP, IL-1 alpha, PTHrP plus IL-1 alpha, ad libitum fed control, and controls pair-fed to the PTHrP plus IL-1 alpha group) for 14 days. At the end of the study, blood and urine were taken for chemical measurements, and tibias and femurs were harvested for histomorphometry and extraction of RNA from periosteal cells. As expected, PTHrP induced hypercalcemia, relative hypophosphatemia, phosphaturia, and reduced bone mass. Osteoblast number was increased, but osteoclast number was not. Indices of bone formation were unchanged or reduced. The dose of IL-1 alpha chosen had no statistically significant effect, except for reduced longitudinal bone growth, but when combined with PTHrP, IL-1 alpha reduced hypercalcemia, hypophosphatemia, and phosphaturia. In contrast to the blood and urine effects, IL-1 alpha did not interact significantly with PTHrP's effect on bone measurements. Northern analysis of periosteal cell mRNA showed that PTHrP reduced expression of osteocalcin, but not glyceraldehyde-3- phosphate dehydrogenase; IL-1 alpha had no additional effect. These data suggest that 1) continuously administered PTHrP alone may induce uncoupled bone turnover with decreased cortical bone formation; 2) IL-1 alpha appears to inhibit strongly the renal effects of PTHrP and weakly (if at all) its actions on bone and, thus, to decrease its hypercalcemic, phosphaturic, and hypophosphatemic actions; and 3) cosecretion of IL-1 alpha, and possibly other peptide cytokines, with PTHrP may modify the clinical expression of HHM.


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