Jean Marie Herrnian; Don P. King; David A. Ferrick
U.C. Davis, School of Veterinary Medicine, Department of Pathology,
Microbiology and Immunology, Davis, CA
Abstract
Cytokines are regulatory proteins secreted by activated cells of the immune
system and a variety of other cells in the body. The pleiotropic effects of cytokines include
numerous effects on cells of the immune system and modulation of inflammatory responses.
Cytokines act in regulatory networks and a single cytokine may act as both a negative signal and
a positive signal depending on the target cell type.
IL 10 in the mouse and human is produced by T cell subsets, B lymphomas,
activated mast cells, epithelial cells, activated macrophages and keratinocytes. IL10's ability
to block activation of cytokine synthesis and several accessory functions of macrophages enables
it to act as a potent suppressor of macrophages T cell subset and NK cell activity, consequently
driving the immune response toward humoral rather than cell mediated immunity. IL 10 inhibits the
production of the inflammatory cytokines IL 1, TNF alpha, and IL 6 by activated macrophages.
These cytokines, when excessively elevated in serum of humans and mice have been shown to
correlate with septicemia and septic shock accompanied by high mortality rates. Mice rendered
deficient in the expression of the IL 10 gene are profoundly more sensitive to endotoxin induced
shock, develop chronic intestinal inflammation and are unable to limit immunopathologic damage
upon the application of cutaneous irritants. Since both the gastrointestinal tract and skin are
sites of continuous exposure to potential antigens, IL 10 has proven to play a prominent role
regulating cellular immune hyperresponsiveness.
The study of health issues in captive and free ranging cetaceans has
suggested that reduced immune competence as well as opportunistic and chronic infectious diseases
to be problematic. Understanding the basic function of the cetacean immune system is central to
the study of cetacean health and illness, and the major obstacles for evaluating immune functions
in cetaceans are due to the lack of availability of cetacean specific reagents. Our previous work
demonstrated the ability to utilize the recombinant human cytokines IL 2 and IL 10 to assess the
roles of these cytokines in the cetacean immune system. Both were shown to function in a similar
fashion and at comparable levels in killer whale peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and
human control PBMC.
While the cytokines themselves tend to remain functional through evolution by
retaining the basic structure and physical properties of their receptor binding regions, the
antigenic regions to which antibodies bind are not usually well conserved. Therefore, most
antibodies to the cytokines are very species specific, and a species specific antibody would then
be necessary to evaluate of the levels of a cytokine in biological samples. The cetacean cytokine
proteins and reagents made to them will be useful to understand the involvement of cytokines in
the regulation of cetacean immune responsiveness.
In order to produce reagents to the endogenous killer whale IL 10 protein and
to have a cetacean specific reagent to better characterize the function of killer whale IL 10 in
vivo it was necessary to first clone the killer whale IL 10 molecule. This was done by reverse
transcription of mRNA isolated from mitogen stimulated killer whale PBMC into cDNA. The cDNA was
then cloned by PCR using degenerate primers designed from conserved areas of known IL 10
sequences. The kw IL 10 sequence will be presented and analyzed for its evolutionary relatedness
to other known IL 10 sequences. Pertinent biology of IL 10 and its potential use as a diagnostic
and therapeutic agent in cetacean medicine will be discussed.