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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
Obese
strain (OS) of chickens spontaneously develops
autoimmune thyroiditis
. Since a defect or abnormality of the thyroid gland may be involved in this disease experiments were performed to compare the iodine uptake of OS with normal thyroid glands. To minimize the interaction of the OS immune system with the thyroid gland during these studies, thyroids were removed from 16-day-old embryos and transferred to the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) of 9-day-old normal White Leghorn (NWL) embryos. NWL thyroid glands were transferred to the same CAM. Six days later the 20-hr 131I uptake of the transplants was determined. Twenty OS thyroid lobes had a mean 131I uptake of 2960 +/- 740 cpm, whereas the NWL thyroids incorporated significantly less iodine (890 +/- 160 cpm; p less than 0.025). These results, along with a previous report suggest that an abnormality of the thyroid gland might be an important factor in the development of
autoimmune thyroiditis
.
...
PMID:Increased iodine uptake by obese strain thyroid glands transplanted to normal chick embryos. 94 10
F1-hybrids of
Obese
strain (OS) chickens, afflicted with spontaneous
autoimmune thyroiditis
(SAT), and normal, inbred CB chickens, do not develop severe thyroiditis. About 50% of these crosses show circulating autoantibodies to thyroglobulin (TgAAb), but the thyroid glands are only slightly infiltrated, suggesting that the target organ is not susceptible to autoimmune attack. In the present study we show that despite this mild infiltration TgAAb are only synthesized by lymphoid cells within the thyroid gland. Furthermore, we demonstrate that immunization with chicken thyroglobulin (Tg) in complete Freund's adjuvant causes severe experimental
autoimmune thyroiditis
(EAT) in F1(OSxCB) hybrids.
...
PMID:Target organ susceptibility and autoantibody production in an animal model of spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis. 139 97
Interleukin 2 (IL-2) is a lymphokine that may disrupt immunological self-tolerance. While being incapable of interfering with intrathymic or peripheral clonal deletion, IL-2 may overcome functional antigen unresponsiveness in anergic T lymphocytes. Anergy of T helper cells of the inflammatory phenotype implies selective silencing of the transcription of the IL-2 gene and thus precludes autocrine IL-2/IL-2 receptor (IL-2R) mediated growth, as well as delivery of help to other T cells or B lymphocytes. Thus, IL-2 serves as a servomodulator regulating post-deletional self-tolerance. IL-2-producing and IL-2-receptive cells are present in a variety of autoimmune lesions, including spontaneous
autoimmune thyroiditis
developing in the
Obese
strain (OS) of chickens, in Hashimoto's struma lymphomatosa, and in Graves' disease. Whereas the OS is characterized by a hyperinducibility of the IL-2/IL-2R system that predisposes to the development of severe thyroid infiltration, the state of the IL-2/IL-R system in circulating lymphocytes of patients developing thyroid autoimmunity, or at risk of doing so, remains to be defined. The most frequent autoimmune side-effect of IL-2 treatment concerns the thyroid gland. IL-2 induces a lymphoid thyroiditis leading to primary hypothyroidism, especially in those patients that have pre-treatment antithyroid autoantibodies. The hypothesis is extrapolated that IL-2 induces autoimmune disease in those patients that bear undeleted thyroid-specific T cells, and in which the lack of manifest thyroiditis relies upon peripheral, post-deletional tolerance.
...
PMID:The role of interleukin 2 in the development of autoimmune thyroiditis. 148 52
We have shown in earlier studies, that the development of spontaneous
autoimmune thyroiditis
(SAT) in chickens of the
Obese
strain (OS) depends on the presence of both, two dominant genes coding for an altered immune regulation and one recessive gene responsible for the susceptibility of the target organ for the autoimmune attack. The product(s) of the latter is (are) still not known. The present study was aimed at identifying possible candidates of cellular components of the thyroid gland of OS chicken and its SAT susceptible parental Cornell C-strain (CS) by high resolution 2-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis. For this purpose organ cultures of the thyroid, bursa, thymus and liver were established and the synthesized polypeptides were labelled by 35S-methionine. OS and CS organs were compared with those of healthy normal White Leghorn (NWL) controls. The autoradiographs of the 2D-gels obtained from individual samples after various labelling periods were subjected to comparative analysis. We have found both quantitative and qualitative differences of polypeptide spots between OS/CS and NWL organ samples, some of them specific for the thyroid gland. Although one has to be aware that in this multidimensional analytical approach numerous, still elusive pattern differences are revealed, the thyroid specific phenomena will be further scrutinized.
...
PMID:Molecular analysis of genetically determined target organ abnormalities in spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis. 209 9
In both mammals and chickens, immunization with exogenous antigens results in a surge of serum glucocorticoid hormone levels concomitant with the antibody response. This effect is mediated by glucocorticoid-increasing factors (GIF) produced by cells of the immune system. In the avian system, GIF appear to act via the hypothalamo-pituitary axis and not directly on the adrenal gland. Interleukin 1 is the main active substance responsible for GIF activity, as shown by molecular sieve and immunoaffinity chromatography studies. In contrast to data from mammals, we found no evidence that interleukin 2 elevates chicken corticosterone.
Obese
strain chickens with spontaneous Hashimoto-like
autoimmune thyroiditis
are deficient in their in vivo GIF response. Because no differences were found between autoimmune and healthy chickens in the corticosterone response of the adrenal gland after ACTH administration, and since autoimmune animals are able to react normally to immobilization stress, it is assumed that this deficiency is due to a specific defect rather than a general disturbance in the endocrine system.
...
PMID:Analysis of the immune-encodrine feedback loop in the avian system and its alteration in chickens with spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis. 224 53
Thyroglobulin autoantibody (Tg-AAb) can be spontaneously produced in vitro with thyroid infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) collected from
Obese
strain chickens 3.5 and 4 weeks old. Attempts to enhance Tg-AAb synthesis with two known polyclonal stimulators of immunoglobulin synthesis in chickens, Staphylococcus aureus Cowan strain 1 and dextran sulphate, failed to increase Tg-AAb production in vitro. Spleen cells and peripheral blood lymphocytes obtained from the same chickens as the TIL and older chickens known to produce moderate to high levels of Tg-AAb in vivo did not produce autoantibody either spontaneously or in the presence of polyclonal Ig stimulators with one exception. With this single, exceptional chicken we obtained a small amount of Tg-AAb produced in vitro with spleen cells. This suggests that in the OS chicken TIL, and to a much lesser extent, the spleen, contribute to the total Tg-AAb produced in this model of
autoimmune thyroiditis
.
...
PMID:Production in vitro of thyroglobulin autoantibody by obese strain (OS) chickens. 244 Jun 29
For the analysis of the genetic background of
autoimmune thyroiditis
we used the
Obese
strain (OS) chicken model which develops a SAT. Practically all animals from this strain show severe lymphoid infiltration of the thyroid gland and circulating autoantibodies against thyroglobulin (Tg-AAb) within a few weeks after hatching. Of the 3 MHC haplotypes (B5, B13, B15) present in the OS, B13 was mostly associated with severe thyroid infiltration. Haplotypes B5 and B15 were associated both with severe, as well as with mild infiltration. To clarify these controversial results published by different groups and to further assess the role of the MHC in the development of SAT, we selected by appropriate breeding sublines with high and low levels of Tg-AAb. With the help of serological methods and GvH assays we were not able to find additional differences in the MHC antigens of that line. Therefore, for further characterization of these haplotypes, RFLP analysis was applied in the present study. Southern blots were done with restriction enzyme digests of erythrocyte DNA hybridized with a chicken cDNA probe (code-p234) for MHC class II antigens. The Southern blots with BamH-I digests showed at least 5 bands, four of which were polymorphic. Four RFLP patterns emerged, two of which were observed within chickens with the B15 haplotype. The confirmation of this RFLP heterogeneity within serologically identical haplotypes requires additional analysis.
...
PMID:Typing of MHC haplotypes in OS chicken by means of RFLP analysis. 257 97
A variety of immunological, endocrinological, and virological abnormalities have been implicated in the etiopathogenesis of spontaneous
autoimmune thyroiditis
(SAT) of
Obese
strain (OS) chickens, e.g., a general T cell hyperreactivity, an increased uptake of iodine into the thyroid gland, a diminution of the glucocorticoid tonus, and an OS-specific endogenous virus. In crosses of the close-bred OS B15/B15 subline with the inbred normal CB B12/B12 strain we have studied the mode of inheritance of these aberrations and their putative association with SAT. The results indicate that none of these OS-specific characteristics alone is an absolute prerequisite for the development of thyroid infiltration, which appears to be governed by one autosomal recessive gene.
...
PMID:Immunogenetic analysis of spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis of obese strain chickens. 278 82
Chickens of the
Obese
strain (OS) develop a hereditary spontaneous
autoimmune thyroiditis
(SAT) which closely resembles human Hashimoto's disease. Analysis of the endogenous viruses harboured by these animals revealed a new endogenous virus (ev22) detected as a 5.5 kb Sac I fragment. Crossbreeding experiments showed that ev22 is vertically transmitted as an autosomal trait not associated with major histocompatibility (MHC) alleles. Preliminary experiments indicate that ev22 does not necessarily cause SAT, however, it may have a modulatory role in the development of the disease.
...
PMID:ev 22, a new endogenous avian leukosis virus locus found in chickens with spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis. 284 Aug 75
The disturbed homeostasis of the immune system in
Obese
strain (OS) chickens with spontaneous
autoimmune thyroiditis
consists in a general T cell hyperreactivity (concanavalin A hyperresponsiveness, interleukin 2 (IL 2) hypersecretion), particularly expressed by those lymphocytes which infiltrate the diseased thyroid gland. This abnormality has been attributed to a defective regulation of both IL 2 production and IL 2 function by low m.w. factors, which are present in serum and splenocyte culture supernatants of normal chickens, but deficient in the OS. In the present study we identified the cellular origin of IL 2 antagonistic activity as a nonlymphoid, adherent cell. Suppressor factor production in vitro was confined to the plastic adherent fraction of spleen cells and preincubation of splenocytes with nylon wool, silica particles, or carbonyl iron significantly reduced the nonspecific suppressive activity of the culture supernatant. Kinetic studies revealed the defect in nonspecific suppression to entail prolonged IL 2 production by concanavalin A-activated OS spleen cells. In vivo treatment of normal White Leghorn chickens with silica led to a decrease in suppressive serum activity down to the OS level, whereas neither neonatal thymectomy nor bursectomy had any effect. The defective suppressor factor production in autoimmune chickens appeared to be due to a functional, but not numeric defect of macrophages as revealed by phenol red staining. The possibility that this aberration in adherent cell function might be a secondary phenomenon to the recently described reduced corticosterone tonus in OS chickens was excluded by in vivo substitution with exogenous glucocorticoids which did not normalize the suppressor defect in serum or in conditioned medium. Finally, we present evidence that T lymphoblasts from OS animals are less susceptible to IL 2 antagonistic regulation than normal cells, which possibly further contributes to the T cell hyperfunction of this autoimmune strain.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of T cell hyperreactivity in obese strain (OS) chickens with spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis: lack in nonspecific suppression is due to a primary adherent cell defect. 295 33
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