Interleukin-1 and Tumor Necrosis Factor Synergistically Stimulate Lung Fibroblast Interleukin-1α Production

Abstract
We determined whether normal human lung fibroblasts expressed cell-associated thymocyte-stimulating activity in response to recombinant interleukin-1 (rIL-1) (alpha and beta) and recombinant tumor necrosis factor (rTNF). Individually, rIL-1 and rTNF induced fibroblast expression of thymocyte-stimulating activity, with rIL-1 being significantly more potent. Importantly, combining rIL-1 and rTNF resulted in a synergistic increase in fibroblast thymocyte-stimulating activity. This synergistic interaction was dose dependent for both cytokines and was not noted when gamma-interferon was combined with rIL-1 or rTNF. In all cases, the thymocyte-stimulating activity was the result of an IL-1 alpha-like moiety whose maximal production required protein synthesis. IL-1 alpha activity could be detected after as little as 4 h, peaked after 24 h, and returned toward normal with longer periods of cytokine-fibroblast incubation. However, cytokine-stimulated fibroblasts that no longer expressed IL-1 alpha activity could be induced to re-express this activity with repeat cytokine challenge. Induction of fibroblast IL-1 alpha by IL-1 and/or TNF may be an important mechanism amplifying IL-1-mediated biologic events at sites of local inflammation.