Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0153470 (Spleen)
4,015 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Spleen cells of BALB/c mice that had been inoculated with syngeneic plasmacytoma MOPC 104E were cultured for 11 days in T-cell growth factor (TCGF) and ultrasonicated tumor extract (USE). Cultured lymphocytes (MOPC-CL) possessed three-fold more lytic units than normal spleen cells cultured in TCGF without USE (N-CL). Moreover, the in vivo neutralization assay suggested that MOPC-CL were composed of at least two populations, one possessing tumor-specific and the other nonspecific antitumor activity. When 2 X 10(7) of MOPC-CL were administered IP to mice that had been inoculated IP with 10(5) MOPC 104E cells 5 days previously marginal prolongation of survival was observed. This effect was not augmented by the single injection of a larger number (5 X 10(7] of CL, but was augmented by the repeated daily administration for 4 days (from day 5 to day 8 after the inoculation) of the same total number (5 X 10(7] of CL. In addition, IP injection of the streptococcal preparation OK432 before the transfer of CL significantly enhanced the therapeutic efficacy, and resulted in a cure rate of 20%. The mechanism of this combined effect appears to involve the effect of OK432 on interleukin 2 (IL-2) regulation systems in vivo. Our culture system with TCGF and USE and our therapy system with OK432 and CL allow the clinical application of adoptive immunotherapy for the many types of solid cancers.
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PMID:Antitumor and therapeutic effects of spleen cells from tumor-bearing mice cultured with T cell growth factor and soluble tumor extract. 633 53

Lewis rats injected in the hind paw with Mycobacterium butyricum develop a severe polyarthritis which shares certain features in common with rheumatoid arthritis in man. Spleen and peripheral blood mononuclear cells from rats with this form of arthritic disease proliferate poorly in vitro in response to concanavalin A (con A), phytohaemagglutinin (PHA), and pokeweed mitogen (PWM). The splenic hyporesponsiveness appears within four days of M. butyricum injection (three to five days prior to the development of detectable arthritis), reaches a peak 16-22 days following injection, and persists for at least 40 days. Buffalo strain rats injected with M. butyricum do not develop arthritis, and their spleen cells respond normally to con A, PHA, and PWM. In response to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) the synthesis of interleukin 1 (IL-1) by spleen or peritoneal macrophages from arthritic Lewis rats equalled or exceeded that of macrophages from normal rats. In contrast splenic T cells from arthritic rats produced reduced amounts of interleukin 2 (IL-2; T cell growth factor) in response to stimulation with PHA or con A. Moreover, con-A-activated spleen cells from arthritic rats failed to bind IL-2 and to respond to this growth factor with increased 3H-TdR uptake as did normal spleen cells. In-vitro treatment of 'arthritic' cells with 10(-5) M indomethacin did not restore to normal their reduced mitogen responsiveness, and spleen cells from normal and arthritic rats were equally sensitive to the inhibitory effects of prostaglandin E2 on con-A-induced proliferative responses. These results indicate that peripheral lymphoid function is compromised in rats with adjuvant-induced arthritis and that this functional deficit is mediated by aberrant synthesis of and response to IL-2 by T cells of arthritic animals.
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PMID:Lymphoid abnormalities in rats with adjuvant-induced arthritis. I. Mitogen responsiveness and lymphokine synthesis. 633 88

The effect of feeding xenoserum (xs) on cytolytic cell activity induced by parenteral injection was examined in C3H/N mice. Spleen cells were cultured with xs and then assayed for cytolytic activity against a panel of 51Cr-labeled YAC-1, AKR-A, or P815 target cells. Prior feeding resulted in significant suppression of responses stimulated by injection and culture. The induction of these responses was antigen specific for xs whereas the effector stage represented polyclonal activation of cytolytic cells. Some effector cells were lysed by either anti-Lyt 2 or anti-NK- 1.2 and complement and some were blocked by anti-Lyt 2 or anti-T200 in the cytotoxicity assay. Thus, both cytolytic T and NK-like cells were suppressed by antigen feeding. Activity of TH cell-derived factors which enhance cytolytic activity ("promoter" factor, interferon, and interleukin 2) also was diminished in culture supernatants of cells from mice fed soluble antigens. The conclusion that polyclonal cytolytic responses induced by soluble antigen can be regulated by prior enteric stimulation is made.
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PMID:Specifically induced suppression of T cell and NK-like cytolytic activity by ingested soluble antigens. 660 72

Spleen cells of diabetes-prone BB Wistar rats were found to generate excessively low proliferative responses, and interleukin 2 (IL-2) levels in response to T-dependent mitogens. This abnormality was not due solely to abnormal T cell numbers since: (a) addition of BB spleen cells of BB splenic macrophages to normal major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-matched Wistar Furth (WF) spleen cells resulted in severe suppression of concanavalin A (Con A)-, phytohemagglutinin (PHA)-, and pokeweed mitogen (PWM)-mediated proliferation, and IL-2 production; (b) macrophage depletion from BB spleen cells, but not B cell or T cell depletion, removed completely the suppressive effects of BB cells on WF cells; (c) macrophage depletion greatly enhanced the response of BB lymphocytes to T-dependent mitogens. Although suppressor macrophages could also be found in the spleen of WF control rats they were present in much smaller numbers than in the spleen of BB rats. The suppressive effect of BB macrophages was partially reduced by addition of the prostaglandin synthetase inhibitor indomethacin to cultures. Furthermore, indomethacin (but not catalase or PMA) considerably augmented IL-2 secretion of Con A-stimulated BB spleen cells, but had little effect on WF spleen cells. In contrast, prostaglandins E1 and E2 (PGE1 and PGE2) suppressed IL-2 production. While IL-2 secretion was severely depressed in BB rats unstimulated and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated IL-1 secretion by splenic macrophages was normal. BB macrophages did not inactivate IL-2. Low IL-2 production and macrophage-mediated suppression were features of all BB rats tested.
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PMID:Immune dysfunction in diabetes-prone BB rats. Interleukin 2 production and other mitogen-induced responses are suppressed by activated macrophages. 660 15

A helper factor(s) distinct from interleukin 2 (IL-2) was shown to be present in the concanavalin A-stimulated supernatant of normal mouse spleen cells (normal Con A Sn). Spleen cells thoroughly depleted of T cells required both IL-2 and this factor to produce antibody-secreting cells in response to sheep erythrocytes, although in the presence of IL-2 and a few T cells the requirement for the factor was less apparent. The factor had an apparent approximately 40,000 mol wt. The factor was found in normal Con A Sn that had been depleted of IL-2 by absorption with IL-2-dependent T cells and was absent from Con A-stimulated supernatants of the IL-2-producing T cell hybridoma, FS6-14.13. These results indicate that multiple helper factors control the B cell response to antigen and that IL-2, in addition to its T cell growth promoting activity, plays a direct role in B cell responses.
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PMID:B cell helper factors. I. Requirement for both interleukin 2 and another 40,000 mol wt factor. 679 4

Spleen cells from MRL-lpr and B6-lpr mice have a marked defect in the ability to produce interleukin 2 (IL-2) in response to concanavalin A stimulation. This defect precedes the onset of clinical illness, increases with age, and eventually becomes virtually absolute. It is not due to cellular suppression of IL-2 production, nor does it reflect the presence of a soluble inhibitor of IL-2 activity. Failure to restore IL-2 production with macrophage-replacing factors, such as interleukin 1 and phorbol myristic acetate, suggests that IL-2 deficiency reflects a primary T cell defect rather than a macrophage defect. MRL-lpr and B6-lpr spleen cells also have an age-dependent reduction in IL-2 response that apparently results from a deficiency of cell surface receptors for IL-2. Congenic MRL-+/+ and B6-+/+ mice, which lack the lpr gene responsible for accelerated autoimmunity and lymphoproliferation, have normal IL-2 activity. These findings suggest that a defect in IL-2 activity may contribute to impaired immunoregulation in mice bearing the lpr gene. The absence of such a defect in MRL-+/+ and B6-+/+ mice further suggests that a single autosomal recessive gene is responsible for IL-2 deficiency.
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PMID:Deficient interleukin 2 activity in MRL/Mp and C57BL/6J mice bearing the lpr gene. 697 51

Spleen cells from C57BL/6 mice immunized in vivo with a syngeneic Friend virus-induced leukemia, FBL-3, were specifically activated by culture for 7 d with FBL-3, then nonspecifically induced to proliferate in vitro for 12 d by addition of supernatants from concanavalin A-stimulated lymphocytes containing interleukin 2 (IL-2). Such long-term cultured T lymphocytes have previously been shown to specifically lyse FBL-3 and to mediate specific adoptive therapy of advanced disseminated FBL-3 when used as an adjunct to cyclophosphamide (CY) in adoptive chemoimmunotherapy. Because the cultured cells are dependent upon IL-2 for proliferation and survival in vitro, their efficacy in vivo is potentially limited by the availability of endogenous IL-2. Thus, the aim of the current study was to determine whether exogenously administered purified IL-2 could augment the in vivo efficacy of long-term cultured T lymphocytes. Purified IL-2 alone or as an adjunct to CY as ineffective in tumor therapy. However, IL-2 was extremely effective in augmenting the efficacy of IL-2-dependent long-term cultured T lymphocytes in adoptive chemoimmunotherapy. The mechanism by which IL-2 functions in vivo is presumably by promoting in vivo growth and/or survival of adoptively transferred cells. This assumption was supported by the findings that IL-2 did not enhance the modest therapeutic efficacy of irradiated long-term cultured cells that were incapable of proliferating in the host and was ineffective in augmenting the in vivo efficacy of noncultured immune cells that are not immediately dependent upon exogenous IL-2 for survival.
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PMID:Augmentation of the anti-tumor therapeutic efficacy of long-term cultured T lymphocytes by in vivo administration of purified interleukin 2. 697 16

Depression of the cellular immune response to Toxoplasma gondii has been reported in both mice and humans. The present study was undertaken to determine the kinetics and mechanism of the observed downregulation of interleukin 2 (IL-2) production during experimental murine toxoplasmosis. For these investigations, the cell-mediated immune response to the wild type (PTg) was compared with that to the less-virulent mutant parasite (PTgB), which is deficient in the major surface antigen, p30 (SAG-1). Spleen cells from infected A/J mice failed to proliferate in response to Toxoplasma antigens during the first week of infection. Both PTg- and PTgB-infected A/J mice exhibited a significant reduction in the concanavalin A (Con A)-induced lymphoproliferative response. Further, the response of splenocytes from mice infected with the wild-type parasite was significantly diminished compared with that of mice infected with PTgB. The lymphoproliferative response to Con A reached its nadir at day 7 and remained below control levels for at least 14 days postinfection. By day 21 postinfection, the response to Con A and to Toxoplasma antigens was restored to the level observed prior to day 7. Con A-stimulated culture supernatants of spleen cells from mice on day 7 postinfection contained significantly less IL-2 than normal mice. There was no significant difference in the numbers of binding sites or capacity of high-affinity IL-2 receptors between infected and normal mouse splenocytes as determined by Scatchard analysis. Exogenous IL-2 at different concentrations failed to restore the proliferative response of lymphocytes from infected mice to Con A. Adherent macrophages from 7-day-infected mice were able to suppress IL-2 production by normal splenocytes following stimulation with Con A. The inhibitory activity mediated by infected cells was reversed by the antibody to IL-10 but not transforming growth factor beta. There were insignificant levels of nitric oxide production in both infected and normal splenocytes. These results indicate that during acute murine toxoplasmosis, there is a well-defined period (day 7) during which both the T-cell mitogen and parasite antigen-associated lymphoproliferative response are reduced. Further, there is a reduction in the production of IL-2 and an increase in IL-10, which appear to mediate, in part, the observed downregulation of immunity to T. gondii.
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PMID:Impairment of the cellular immune response in acute murine toxoplasmosis: regulation of interleukin 2 production and macrophage-mediated inhibitory effects. 800 79

During the time of egg deposition, schistosome-infected mice exhibit a downregulation in interleukin 2 and interferon gamma production toward parasite antigens, mitogens, and foreign nonparasite protein antigens. To determine whether this imbalance in cytokine response would impact on CD8+ cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses, as well as on immune clearance of viral infections, we challenged Schistosoma mansoni-infected BALB/c mice, when cytokine imbalance was prominent, with a recombinant vaccinia virus expressing human immunodeficiency virus type 1 gp160. In contrast to control vaccinia-infected animals, S. mansoni plus vaccinia-infected mice did not produce significant Th1 cytokine responses upon in vitro stimulation with recombinant gp120, consistent with previous results for nonparasite antigens. However, more striking was the downregulation of the virus-specific CTL response not previously studied. Spleen cells from vaccinia-infected control mice displayed strong CD8+ cytolytic activity against gp160-transfected fibroblasts and fibroblasts pulsed with a peptide (P18) representing a CTL epitope of gp160. In contrast, mice coinfected with S. mansoni and vaccinia manifested absent or markedly reduced in vitro CTL activity even in the presence of exogenous interleukin 2. To determine whether this immune dysregulation might impact on viral clearance, we measured virus titers in tissues as a function of time. Mice infected with vaccinia virus alone rapidly cleared the virus, whereas in animals coinfected with S. mansoni, viral clearance was delayed by as much as 3 weeks in the liver and by several days in the spleen and lungs. These observations suggest that helminth infection may influence immune responses to concurrent viral infections.
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PMID:Helminth infection results in decreased virus-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T-cell and Th1 cytokine responses as well as delayed virus clearance. 809 48

We previously reported that the extract of seeds from Aeginetia Indica L (AIL), a parasitic plant, induces potent antitumor immunity in tumor-bearing mice and that CD4+ T cells appear to be the main contributors in the induction of antitumor resistance. The present study was set up to investigate the in vitro effects of AIL on various lymphoid cells. Spleen cells from mice pretreated with AIL every 2 days for 1 week produced interleukin 2 (IL-2), interferon gamma (IFN gamma), tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and interleukin 6 (IL-6) when these cells were stimulated in vitro by AIL. Further, we found that CD4+ T cells were main producers of IL-2 and TNF upon the stimulation with ALL in vitro, while both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells secreted IFN. On the other hand, ALL was mitogenic in vitro to T enriched splenic lymphocytes as well as B enriched splenic lymphocytes. Moreover, AIL also proliferated thymocytes and this activity was potently synergistic with a suboptimal dose of concanavalin A (Con A). Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) contamination in AIL preparation was negligible since proliferative activity of AIL to B enriched splenic lymphocytes was not influenced in the presence of an endotoxin antagonist, polymyxin B sulfate (PMB). Further, B cell mitogenic activity of AIL seems to be mediated by different mechanism(s) from that of LPS since ALL could proliferate B enriched lymphocytes of C3H/HeJ mice which do not respond to the stimulation with LPS. A well known biological response modifier (BRM), Krestin (PSK), had no ability in inducing either T or B lymphocyte activation in vitro as shown by AIL.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Seed extract of Aeginetia indica L induces cytokine production and lymphocyte proliferation in vitro. 820 51


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