The calcium-independent mannose 6-phosphate receptor (CIMPR) is a receptor for multiple ligands, including leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF), an IL-6 type cytokine, and IGF-II. CIMPR targets newly synthesized ligands to lysosomes and induces internalization/degradation of secreted ligands. A natural soluble form of CIMPR (sCIMPR) neutralizes IGF-II mitogenic potency on hepatocytes and fibroblasts. Herein we show that sCIMPR also inhibits LIF-driven proliferation of myeloid and lymphoid cell lines. Similar inhibition was observed with IL-6 and IL-11, two other IL-6-type cytokines that do not interact with CIMPR. Neutralizing anti-IGF-II antibodies inhibited IL-6-, IL-11-, and LIF-driven cell proliferation to the same extent as sCIMPR, suggesting that neutralization of serum IGF-II by sCIMPR plays a major role in IL-6-type cytokine-dependent cell proliferation. Confirming this idea, ERK1/2 and AKT/protein kinase B, the kinases necessary for cell proliferation and survival, were activated by IGF-II alone or by the association of IL-6-type cytokines and IGF-II. IL-6-type cytokines alone (up to 10 ng/ml) did not activate ERK1/2 or AKT, but did activate STAT3 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 3), a transcription factor necessary for the G1 to S phase cell cycle transition. Activation of ERK1/2 and AKT by IGF-II thus appears essential to sustain cellular expansion driven by IL-6-type cytokines.