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Query: UMLS:C0085110 (
SCID
)
11,041
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In
severe combined immunodeficiency
disease, both T and B cell functions are diminished or absent and affected usually succumb to overwhelming infection within the first year of life. We are reporting a case with
severe combined immunodeficiency
, Swiss type who suffered from interstitial pneumonia which cleared by treatment with recombinant human interferon gamma. In this case, we don't know the exact mechanism which caused the clearing of the interstitial pneumonia. However, we can speculate that antiviral action and activated macrophages or monocytes, through the recombinant human interferon gamma, might exert its effect on interstitial pneumonia. Though we should extend its application to more cases of
SCID
with interstitial pneumonia, this report may suggests a new application for
interferon-gamma
as a potential corrective and therapeutic agent for interstitial pneumonia in congenital immunodeficiency diseases.
...
PMID:Effect of interferon-gamma treatment on interstitial pneumonia in a patient with severe combined immunodeficiency. 181 57
Infection of C57BL/6J mice with Mycoplasma pulmonis (MP) enhanced NK cell function 3-7 days later, as detected by in vitro and in vivo assays. Moreover, spleen and lung cells of acutely infected C57BL/6J mice inhibited MP growth in vitro. The effectors were eliminated by treatment with anti-NK antibody in vivo and anti-asialo GM1 serum or anti-3A4 antibody plus complement in vitro. Clearance of viable and radiolabeled MP from the lungs was also enhanced in acutely infected mice. Acutely infected mice with
severe combined immunodeficiency
(
SCID
) eliminated viable MP faster than did uninfected mice. Antibodies to
interferon-gamma
(
IFN-gamma
) impaired clearance of MP from the lungs of
SCID
mice and decreased their survival times. Activated NK cells can function in resistance to early stages of infection with MP. NK cells directly inhibit MP with secrete
IFN-gamma
, which may activate macrophages or inhibit the growth of MP or both.
...
PMID:Resistance to Mycoplasma pulmonis mediated by activated natural killer cells. 214 May 83
Cytotoxic mechanisms (e.g., natural killer (NK) lysis, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, and cytotoxic T lymphocyte lysis) play an important role in host defense against various infections and neoplasms. Lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cytotoxicity, induced in vitro by incubating mononuclear cells with interleukin 2 (IL-2) for 2-5 days, may also represent an important component of the body's cytotoxic repertoire. In 10 patients with congenital cellular immunodeficiencies, including 5 with
severe combined immunodeficiency
, the mean LAK activity in a 3-hr chromium release assay against Raji target cells was 44 +/- 8.1%, which is equivalent to that observed in normal adults and neonates. In only one case, a patient with reticular dysgenesis, was there absent LAK cell generation. Haploidentical T cell-depleted bone marrow transplantation (BMT) restored LAK activity in this patient. LAK activity was first observed in this patient and two others 3-6 weeks following BMT, prior to other evidence of immunologic engraftment such as lymphocyte proliferation to mitogens, NK activity, or
interferon-gamma
production. One patient with adenosine deaminase deficiency showed normal levels of LAK activity despite absent NK activity. Three patients with chronic granulomatous disease also had normal LAK activity (57 +/- 14% specific lysis). In 9 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), IL-2 activation resulted in a mean cytotoxic activity of 56 +/- 8.7% toward Raji targets. In addition, 9 patients with pre-AIDS complex also showed normal levels of cytotoxicity (37 +/- 3.3% toward Raji targets), equivalent to that of 8 normal controls, including two healthy homosexual males (mean lysis 38 +/- 3.9%). These results indicate that LAK cells appear early in immunologic ontogeny. Further, the mechanism of lysis is not oxygen dependent since LAK activity was present in the 3 patients with chronic granulomatous disease. The ability to generate LAK in a wide spectrum of immunodeficiencies may indicate that IL-2 could be used in therapy of such disorders.
...
PMID:Lymphokine-activated killer cells in primary immunodeficiencies and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 250 19
We report four cases of Omenn's syndrome (OS), an autosomal recessive disease characterized by early erythrodermia, protracted diarrhea, severe infections, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, failure to thrive, and leukocytosis with marked eosinophilia. The immunological investigations revealed B lymphopenia with increased levels of serum IgE and marked depression of T-cell activation, not restored by the addition of exogenous interleukin 2 (IL-2). IL-2 and
interferon-gamma
(
IFN-gamma
) production in vitro were very low or absent. One patient was treated with HLA-identical bone marrow transplant with a complete remission of the clinical picture and the immunological defect. The infant died of graft versus host disease 4 months after the graft. For the remaining three infants the outcome was also fatal within the first year of life. In conclusion, OS should be considered a
severe combined immunodeficiency
disease with peculiar clinical, immunological, and histological findings.
...
PMID:Clinical and immunological findings in four infants with Omenn's syndrome: a form of severe combined immunodeficiency with phenotypically normal T cells, elevated IgE, and eosinophilia. 311 64
A primary interest in immunity to intracellular pathogenic microorganisms and tumors is to understand the mechanisms by which macrophages are activated for various functions. Two parameters of macrophage activation are the expression of the class II histocompatibility proteins or Ia molecules (1), and cytotoxic activity. The ability of T cells to induce these responses has been extensively documented and occurs via their secretion of
interferon-gamma
(
IFN-gamma
) after interaction with antigen (2-6). However, in a recent study using mice with the
severe combined immunodeficiency
(scid) mutation (7) which have no detectable T or B cell functions (7-9), we were surprised to find the induction of Ia expression on macrophages and the partial inhibition of bacterial growth after infection with Listeria monocytogenes (10). We have now utilized neutralizing monoclonal antibodies specific for murine
IFN-gamma
to investigate the mechanism of macrophage activation in scid mice. We show here that
IFN-gamma
can be produced by scid mice in the absence of lymphocyte-mediated immunity, and this
IFN-gamma
is important for macrophage activation during infection with Listeria. These results indicate the presence of an important T lymphocyte-independent mechanism of macrophage activation and
IFN-gamma
production in response to infection.
...
PMID:A T cell-independent mechanism of macrophage activation by interferon-gamma. 311 23
Neopterin is produced in large amounts specifically from macrophages upon stimulation with
interferon-gamma
(
IFN-gamma
). Measurement of neopterin allows a direct in vivo quantification of T cell activation. This is particularly useful, e.g., in early diagnosis of graft rejection. Since disease states with elevated neopterin levels in some cases are coupled with an impaired cellular immunity, we decided to investigate the possible influence that severely diminished cellular immunity might have on urinary neopterin levels. Our investigation on six children with severe primary immunodeficiency presents some evidence that immunodeficiency itself does not account for an increase in neopterin when patients are free from infections. Neopterin was also normal in an
SCID
patient who was completely lacking T cells and was suffering from severe infections. Two patients with primary immunodeficiency and residual T lymphocytes suffered from severe infections and showed elevated neopterin. The data support the hypothesis that elevated neopterin levels are dependent on the presence of activated T lymphocytes. Residual T lymphocytes of
SCID
patients have the capacity to induce neopterin in vivo when patients suffer from infections.
...
PMID:Urinary neopterin in infants with primary immunodeficiency. 326 Feb 10
Severe combined immunodeficiency
(scid) mice have been useful in identifying specific host defense systems responsible for containing and eradicating Cryptosporidium parvum infection. Adult scid mice were given C. parvum oocysts and treated weekly with monoclonal antimurine
interferon-gamma
(anti-IFN-gamma). Anti-IFN-gamma-treated mice had more cryptosporidia seen in the intestines and had more severe morphologic changes associated with disease than control mice. To assess the mechanism of this effect, infected adult BALB/c and scid mice were treated with the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, aminoguanidine. Infection in aminoguanidine-treated mice was not significantly different from that in control mice. Next, the effects of pharmacologic doses of IFN-gamma (10,000 IU) on the course of cryptosporidiosis in newborn scid mice were evaluated. IFN-gamma did not reverse the initial susceptibility of neonatal scid mice to cryptosporidiosis and continued treatment with IFN-gamma (10,000 IU weekly) did not alter survival. We conclude that IFN-gamma does not exert its anticryptosporidial effect by stimulation of nitric oxide production. Deficient IFN-gamma production by neonatal lymphocytes does not appear to be responsible for the increased severity of infection observed in neonatal animals. Also, IFN-gamma may not be useful in treating immunocompromised patients with cryptosporidiosis.
...
PMID:Inability of interferon-gamma and aminoguanidine to alter Cryptosporidium parvum infection in mice with severe combined immunodeficiency. 751 9
We have investigated the mechanism of tolerance in a patient with
severe combined immunodeficiency
(
SCID
) transplanted with HLA-haploidentical, T cell-depleted bone marrow cells obtained from the mother. At 4 years after transplantation, T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, and a small percentage (2%) of B cells were found to be of donor origin, whereas monocytes and the majority of B cells remained of host origin. In primary mixed lymphocyte cultures (MLC), the engrafted T cells of the donor did not proliferate in response to the host cells, whereas untransplanted donor T cells showed good proliferative responses. However, CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell clones of donor origin with specificity for class II and class I HLA determinants of the host were isolated. CD8+, host-reactive T-cell clones displayed normal cytotoxic activity after stimulation with the host cells, but proliferative responses of CD4+, host-reactive T-cell clones were considerably reduced. In addition, both CD8+ and CD4+, host-reactive T-cell clones produced very low to undetectable levels of interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL-4, IL-5, IL-10,
interferon-gamma
, and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor after specific antigenic activation, which may be responsible for their nonresponsive state in vivo. Expression of the CD3 zeta subunit of the T-cell receptor (TcR) was normal, and after stimulation via CD3, Raf-1 and p42 mitogen activated protein (MAP) kinase were phosphorylated, indicating that this part of the signaling pathway after triggering of the TcR/CD3 complex is present. These results, together with our previous observation that dysfunctional, host-reactive T-cell clones can be isolated in
SCID
patients transplanted with fetal liver stem cells, demonstrate that lack of clonal deletion of host-reactive T cells is a general phenomenon after HLA-mismatched stem cell transplantation.
...
PMID:Dysfunctional cytokine production by host-reactive T-cell clones isolated from a chimeric severe combined immunodeficiency patient transplanted with haploidentical bone marrow. 770 97
Tumor cells transduced with cytokine genes provide a model to study host-effector mechanisms involved in tumor rejection. Local IL-2 production within a tumor site mimics a specific helper-T-cell response, bypassing an immunization phase. Growth of mouse B16F10 melanomas transduced with interleukin-2 (IL-2) in syngeneic hosts were significantly delayed. IL-2-producing B16F10 cells were super-transduced with
interferon-gamma
to up-regulate expression of major-histocompatibility-complex (MHC) antigens. Expression of class-I- or class-II-MHC molecules did not augment tumor rejection of IL-2-secreting tumor cells. Rejection of IL-2-transduced B16F10 cells in syngeneic mice was unaffected by depletion of CD8+ T-cell and NK1.1+ natural-killer (NK) cell populations. Tumor rejection occurred in
SCID
mice even after depletion of NK1.1+ cells, confirming that T cells and NK cells were not required for tumor rejection. Histologic examination of sites of tumor rejection showed inflammation, characterized by infiltrates of macrophages, occasional neutrophils, and areas of necrosis. When mice were treated systemically with macrophage-colony-stimulating factor to expand monocyte pools, tumor rejection was significantly augmented further. This study shows that in situ IL-2 production can result in tumor rejection mediated by inflammatory events, possibly involving macrophages, and mimicking a delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) response even in the absence of T cells and NK cells. Furthermore, tumor rejection can be enhanced by systemic administration of a cytokine to expand potential inflammatory cell populations.
...
PMID:Rejection of mouse melanoma elicited by local secretion of interleukin-2: implicating macrophages without T cells or natural killer cells in tumor rejection. 770 56
The early phase of acquired cellular immunity to Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection is mediated by the emergence of protective CD4 T lymphocytes that secrete cytokines including
interferon-gamma
(
IFN-gamma
), a molecule which is pivotal in the expression of resistance to tuberculosis. Recent evidence demonstrates that infection with M. tuberculosis induces peripheral blood mononuclear cells to release the cytokine interleukin-12 (IL-12), a molecule that promotes the emergence of T-helper type-1 (Th1),
IFN-gamma
-producing T cells. We demonstrate here that IL-12 mRNA expression was induced by M. tuberculosis infection both in vivo and in vitro and that exogenous administration of IL-12 to mice transiently resulted in increased resistance to the infection. IL-12 also increased the production of
IFN-gamma
by both splenocytes derived from infected animals treated in vivo and by antigen-stimulated CD4 cells from untreated infected animals, with maximal effects at times associated with the expansion of antigen-specific CD4 T cells in vivo. In the absence of a T-cell response, as seen in
SCID
mice or nude mice, IL-12 only slightly augmented the moderate bacteriostatic capacity of these immunocompromised mice. Neutralization of IL-12 by specific monoclonal antibodies resulted in a reduction in granuloma integrity and slowing of the capacity of the animal to control bacterial growth.
...
PMID:The role of interleukin-12 in acquired immunity to Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. 775 Oct 26
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