| Literature DB >> 6976248 |
D A Cooper, P Hansen, M Duckett, J B Ziegler, R Penny.
Abstract
We studied the effect of glucocorticosteroids (GCS) on IgG synthesis by peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 19 patients with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID). Purified T and B lymphocyte subpopulations from patients and normal subjects were recombined at various T : B ratios and cultured for 8 days unstimulated, stimulated with pokeweed mitogen (PWM) and in the presence of prednisolone. IgG synthesis was measured in the culture supernatants by radioimmunoassay. Enhancement of PWM-stimulated IgG synthesis by prednisolone at high T : B ratios was found in nine patients, four of whom produced negligible amounts of IgG with PWM alone. In four patients, enhancement by prednisolone of IgG synthesis by purified B lymphocytes was noted. In three out of eight patients whose IgG synthesis was increased by normal allogeneic T lymphocytes with PWM and prednisolone, negligible amounts of IgG were produced by similarly treated autologous combinations. T lymphocytes from CVID patients provided less help compared with normal T lymphocytes for IgG synthesis by normal B lymphocytes at high T : B ratios even in the presence of prednisolone. GCS in vitro enhance IgG synthesis by lymphocytes from some but not all patients with CVID by a mechanism which appears independent of GCS action on regulatory T lymphocytes.Entities:
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Year: 1981 PMID: 6976248 PMCID: PMC1537386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Immunol ISSN: 0009-9104 Impact factor: 4.330