IL-4 plays an important role in the development of certain immune disorders, particularly allergies and some autoimmune diseases.
Allergic diseases IL-4, along with other Th2 cytokines, is involved in the airway inflammation observed in the lungs of patients with allergic
asthma. Allergic diseases are sets of disorders that are manifested by a disproportionate response of the immune system to the allergen and Th2 responses. These pathologies include, for example, atopic dermatitis, asthma, or systemic anaphylaxis. Interleukin 4 mediates important pro-inflammatory functions in asthma, including induction of isotype rearrangement of IgE, expression of vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1), promoting eosinophilic transmigration through endothelium, mucus secretion and T helper type 2 (Th2) leading to cytokine release. Asthma is a complex genetic disorder that has been associated with IL-4 gene promoter polymorphism and proteins involved in IL-4 signaling.
Tumors IL-4 has been shown to drive
mitogenesis,
dedifferentiation, and
metastasis in
rhabdomyosarcoma. IL-4 has a significant effect on tumor progression. Increased IL-4 production was found in breast, prostate, lung, renal cells and other types of cancer. Overexpression of IL-4R has been found in many types of cancer. Renal cells and glioblastoma modify – receptors per cell depending on tumor type. IL-4 can primitively motivate tumor cells and increase their apoptosis resistance by increasing tumor growth.
Nervous system Brain tissue tumors such as
astrocytoma,
glioblastoma,
meningioma, and
medulloblastoma overexpress receptors for various growth factors including
epidermal growth factor receptor, FGFR-1 (
fibroblast growth factor receptor 1), TfR (
transferrin receptor), IL-13R. Most human meningiomas massively expresses IL-4 receptors, indicating its role in cancer progression. They express IL-4Rα and IL13Rα-1-1, but not the surface γc chain, suggesting that most human meningiomas express IL-4 type II.
HIV IL-4 may also play a role in the infection and development of
HIV disease. Auxiliary T cells are a key element of HIV-1 infection. Several signs of immune dysregulation such as polyclonal B cell initialization, previous cell-mediated antigen-induced response and hypergammaglobulinaemia occur in most HIV-1 infected patients and are associated with cytokines synthesized by Th2 cells. Increased IL-4 production by Th2 cells has been demonstrated in people infected with HIV. == See also ==