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Supplementary figure 2 from Differential Effects of IL6 and Activin A in the Development of Cancer-Associated Cachexia

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posted on 2023-03-31, 00:27 authored by Justin L. Chen, Kelly L. Walton, Hongwei Qian, Timothy D. Colgan, Adam Hagg, Matthew J. Watt, Craig A. Harrison, Paul Gregorevic

mRNA expression of activin A and Il-6 in the TA muscle, heart, liver and spleen of mice bearing colon-26 tumors.

Funding

NHMRC

Cancer Council Victoria

Endocrine Society

Victorian Cancer Agency

Hudson Institute

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

Victorian Government

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ARTICLE ABSTRACT

Cachexia is a life-threatening wasting syndrome lacking effective treatment, which arises in many cancer patients. Although ostensibly induced by multiple tumor-produced cytokines (tumorkines), their functional contribution to initiation and progression of this syndrome has proven difficult to determine. In this study, we used adeno-associated viral vectors to elevate circulating levels of the tumorkines IL6 and/or activin A in animals in the absence of tumors as a tactic to evaluate hypothesized roles in cachexia development. Mice with elevated levels of IL6 exhibited 8.1% weight loss after 9 weeks, whereas mice with elevated levels of activin A lost 11% of their body weight. Co-elevation of both tumorkines to levels approximating those observed in cancer cachexia models induced a more rapid and profound body weight loss of 15.4%. Analysis of body composition revealed that activin A primarily triggered loss of lean mass, whereas IL6 was a major mediator of fat loss. Histologic and transcriptional analysis of affected organs/tissues (skeletal muscle, fat, and liver) identified interactions between the activin A and IL6 signaling pathways. For example, IL6 exacerbated the detrimental effects of activin A in skeletal muscle, whereas activin A curbed the IL6-induced acute-phase response in liver. This study presents a useful model to deconstruct cachexia, opening a pathway to determining which tumorkines are best targeted to slow/reverse this devastating condition in cancer patients. Cancer Res; 76(18); 5372–82. ©2016 AACR.

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