| Literature DB >> 3875655 |
G Krömer, K Schauenstein, N Neu, K Stricker, G Wick.
Abstract
Spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis of OS chickens is associated with a marked hyperreactivity of the T cell system. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the underlying regulatory mechanisms. Co-cultivation experiments between Con A-stimulated OS and NWL lymphocytes in communicating cultures revealed soluble regulatory factors to be responsible for the observed functional differences: the high proliferative response to Con A and hyperproduction of IL 2 of OS cells was found to be due to a deficiency in the conditioned medium of dialyzable inhibitory factor(s) that regulate IL 2 secretion of NWL lymphocytes. Furthermore, sera of young NWL chickens were found to profoundly inhibit the IL 2-promoted lymphoblast proliferation. This IL 2 antagonizing activity is lost with age (3 to 6 yr) and was found to be significantly diminished in OS birds throughout ontogeny, thus pointing to possible parallels between immune regulatory dysfunction in autoimmunity and in physiologic aging. Both enhanced T cell response and the defect in serum suppressor were inherited by (OS X CB)F1 animals, indicating that these two aberrations may be related to each other.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1985 PMID: 3875655
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422