IL-18 is produced by prostate cancer cells and secreted in response to interferons.

2003 
Murine models have shown that IL-18 has antiangiogenic and antitumor effects, but little is known about IL-18 production in human tumors. We investigated IL-18 expression in clinically localized prostate cancers by immunohistochemistry and showed that 75% of the prostate cancers studied (27/36 cases) presented with tumor cells producing IL-18. Prostate tumor cell lines PC-3, DU 145 and LNCaP synthesized the immature form of IL-18 (p24). IFN-γ produced in prostate cancers induced caspase-1 mRNA and IL-18 secretion of tumor cell lines, which was inhibited by the cell-permeable Tyr-Val-Ala-Asp-aldehyde caspase-1 inhibitor (YVAD-CHO). Interestingly, IFN-α also induced IL-18 secretion of the poorly differentiated cell line PC-3. PC-3 and DU 145, but not the well-differentiated cell line LNCaP, expressed IL-18Rα (IL-1Rrp) protein and transcripts for IL-18Rβ (AcPL). Exogenous IL-18 increased mitochondrial activity of both cell lines evaluated by the tetrazolium (MTT) assay but did not influence their proliferation. This indicated that prostate tumor cells could secrete IL-18 in response to IFN-γ in the tumor microenvironment and that IL-18 could act as a autocrine/paracrine factor for the tumor. In the cohort of patients studied, IL-18 expression in prostate cancers (with up to 10% of tumor cells stained) was associated with a favorable outcome and equally predictive as pathologic stage on multivariate analysis (log rank test, p = 0.02). Tumor IL-18 production is a novel physiopathologic feature of prostate cancer and appears to be a favorable event in the course of the disease. Modulation of IL-18 production by interferons could have a beneficial clinical effect, which deserves further investigation. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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