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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thyroglobulin
-binding lymphoid cells were identified in the spleen of
Obese
strain (DS) chickens by their capacity to form rosettes with thyroglobulin-coated chicken red blood cells. The nature of these cells was studied in inhibition experiments using turkey anti-chicken bursa or thymus cell sera and rabbit antisera specific for chicken Ig, gamma, mu, alpha, Fabgamma or Fcgamma. Spleen cells actively synthesizing surface receptors for thyroglobulin were identified as B cells and the receptors found to be complete IgM molecules. Normal T cells became thyroglobulin-rosette-forming cells via passive adsorption of thyroglobulin antibodies, a phenomenon which could be inhibited competitively by the addition of normal chicken serum to the incubation medium.
Thyroglobulin
antibodies passively adsorbed onto the surface of normal T cells also belong to the IgM class as verified both by inhibition experiments and studies employing IgM and IgG fractions of a high titered OS serum for the preincubation of the cell suspensions. Only preincubation with the IgM fraction of the anti-thyroglobulin antibodies resulted in the formation of significant numbers of passive rosette-forming cells.
...
PMID:The nature of active and passive thyroglobulin binding lymphoid cells in Obese strain (OS) chickens. 82 40
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
In
Obese
strain (OS) chickens the role of maternal antibodies, passively transferred through the egg to the developing chick, was evaluated as a causative factor in the early development of spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis (SAT). In the egg, passive antibody titers were highest in the yolk and lower in the allantoic fluid and sera of developing embryos. This passage of antibodies was documented by use of radiolabeled antibodies. In dams with high antibody titers, antibodies could be found in the sera of chicks at the time of hatch.
Thyroglobulin
was absent in the yolk of OS eggs during embryonal life, as compared with its detection in normal eggs. Immune complexes (thyroglobulin-autoantibody) detected in the thyroids of OS, but not CS, chicks at the time of hatch, or earlier, appear to reflect the presence of the maternally transferred antibodies. A pair of crosses between OS chickens, with thyroiditis, and the C strain (CS), without thyroiditis, was made to evaluate the role of transferred antibodies in the pathogenesis of autoimmune disease. When an OS chicken was the dam, maternal antibodies could be passively transferred; when a CS chicken was the dam, no maternal antibodies were present to be transferred. Nevertheless, both hybrids developed full-blown thyroiditis, demonstrating that binding of transferred maternal antibody to thyroglobulin is not a prerequisite for the induction of SAT. However, presence of maternal antibodies precipitated the onset of disease. Immune complexes formed in the embryonic thyroid are likely to participate in early autoimmune disease, although the development of full-blown thyroiditis may await the competency of the chick's immune system to provide the characteristic cellular infiltrate.
...
PMID:Materno-embryonally transferred antibodies precipitate autoimmune thyroiditis in obese strain (OS) chickens. 372 17
Organ-specific autoantibodies (AAb) to thyroid and non-thyroid antigens of various endocrine and exocrine glands (glandular stomach, pancreas, adrenal, parathyroid, and striated muscle) were determined by different serological procedures in sera from
Obese
strain (OS), Cornell C strain (CS), normal inbred strains (CC and CB), and outbred normal White Leghorn (NWL) chickens.
Thyroglobulin
autoantibodies (Tg-AAbs), evaluated by immunodiffusion, passive hemagglutination, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and indirect immunofluorescence, as well as other organ-specific AAbs determined by indirect immunofluorescence, predominated in OS chickens. Tg-AAbs were found in the highest frequency, thyroid microsomal AAbs in intermediate frequency, and the other organ-specific AAbs in low frequency in OS chickens. Thyroid and non-thyroid organ-specific AAbs were found only occasionally in control chickens and then only in low titers. Thus, spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis of OS chickens correlates closely with human Hashimoto thyroiditis not only in respect to AAbs to thyroid antigens but also to nonthyroid organ-specific antigens. Non-organ-specific AAbs, such as antinuclear antibodies, antibodies to chicken red blood cell nuclei, mitochondrial AAbs, smooth muscle antibodies, and reticulin AAbs occur in high frequency in all strains of chickens tested. Even a slight prevalence in NWL chickens was seen, indicating that the abnormal immune response in OS chickens is restricted to organ-specific antigens of the thyroid gland and in some cases also to other exocrine or endocrine glands.
...
PMID:Nonthyroid autoantibodies in obese strain (OS) chickens. 642 87
Neonatal thyroidectomy of
Obese
strain (OS) chickens showed that the spontaneous development of thyroid autoimmunity in these animals was fully dependent upon the presence of autoantigen, and could not be ascribed essentially to antigen-independent mechanisms such as polyclonal lymphocyte activation or innate distortions within the idiotype network. Similarly, removal of the gland in animals with established thyroiditis demonstrated the need for antigen to maintain the autoimmune response.
Thyroglobulin
from normal chickens induced autoantibodies in neonatally thyroidectomized OS birds, suggesting that an abnormality in the structure of this protein is not a prerequisite for the development of autoimmunity. This contention is supported by the finding that OS and normal thyroglobulin were immunochemically indistinguishable, whether compared using OS autoantibodies or rabbit anti-chicken thyroglobulin sera.
...
PMID:The role of self-antigen in the development of autoimmunity in Obese strain chickens with spontaneous autoallergic thyroiditis. 706 70
TSH assay is the best parameter of the thyroid function. For adults, the normal interval of TSH concentrations range from 0.4 to 4 mUI/L. At the first trimester of pregnancy, TSH levels must be <2.5 mUI/L. Normal TSH levels increase with aging and
obesity
. The biological diagnosis relies on the identification of excessive secretion of the metanephrines which are more sensitive and specific than those of catecholamines. The concentrations of the free plasmatic metanephrines reflect the ongoing production of tumor. Plasma methoxytyramine is a novel biomarker of metastatic pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas. Serum IGF1 is a reliable measure of integrated GH concentrations in patients with acromegaly. Accurate assessment of IGF1 concentrations requires age and sex-matched control values. IGF1 is a sensitive tool for the diagnosis of acromegaly and efficacy of therapies. Serum AMH assay is more sensitive, more specific and more reproducible that counting of ovarian follicles by ultrasound. AMH level above 5 ng/mL (35 pmol/L) could be chosen as one of the diagnostic criteria for the polycystic ovary syndrome. In early or "incipiens" ovarian failure, the decrease in serum AMH is far ahead of the increase in FSH.
Thyroglobulin
(TG) and calcitonin (CT) are the sensitive and specific markers of respectively well-differentiated thyroid cancers of follicular origin and of the medullary thyroid cancers. The same tumour marker assay should be used to monitor a given patient. Chromogranin A (CgA) is a highly efficient biomarker for diagnosis and follow-up of various endocrine tumours. Despite the lack of international standardisation, some CgA assays are reliable.
...
PMID:[Biomarkers in endocrinology]. 2434 77