| Literature DB >> 2984689 |
H S Siegel, N R Gould, J W Latimer.
Abstract
Corticosteroid levels in the blood serum of White Rock pullets were significantly increased within 1 hr after an iv injection of heat-killed Salmonella pullorum antigen (SP-Ag), and reached levels 7 to 10 times that of PBS-injected controls within 2 hr after SP-Ag injection. Incubations with isolated adrenal cells indicated that serum from SP-Ag-injected birds had the ability to stimulate the synthesis or release of corticosteroids twice that of serum PBS-injected birds. Stripping the serum from SP-Ag-injected birds with activated charcoal and precipitated silica (Quso G-32) removed the corticosteroids and the adrenal-stimulating ability. A 2-hr incubation of isolated adrenal cells with leukocytes from spleens removed from chickens 1 hr after injection with SP-Ag, using stripped serum as the medium, stimulated a two- to fivefold increase in corticosteroid as compared to splenic leukocytes from PBS-injected chickens incubated in the same medium. The results indicate that an "ACTH-like" substance was produced by the S. pullorum antigen-stimulated splenic leukocytes.Entities:
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Year: 1985 PMID: 2984689 DOI: 10.3181/00379727-178-42037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Soc Exp Biol Med ISSN: 0037-9727