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Query: UMLS:C0155339 (Brown)
12,436 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Many groups have reported that preoperative injection of donor-derived whole spleen cells or major histocompatibility complex antigens prolongs organ allograft survival in experimental models, but the immunosuppressive mechanism(s) responsible remains unclear. A central, confounding issue is how to reconcile documentation of comparable levels of mRNA for IL-2 in suppressed versus control groups with obvious host hyporesponsiveness. We used a model of tolerance induction involving perioperative injection of donor spleen cells and injection of CsA at day 2 after transplant to analyze the serial expression of several proinflammatory cytokines relevant to development of alloresponsiveness within cardiac allografts and recipients' spleens. Four experimental groups of Lewis rats receiving vascularized heterotopic cardiac allografts from Brown Norway (BN) donors were evaluated: (1) untreated controls; (2) animals receiving intraoperative injection of donor BN spleen cells; (3) those receiving a single injection of CsA on day 2 post-Tx; and (4) animals given the combination of intraoperative BN spleen cells and CsA on day 2 post-Tx. Graft survival was significantly prolonged in Lewis rats receiving the combined spleen cell/CsA therapy (mean 64 days, with 40% of grafts surviving > 100 days, n = 15) compared with acute rejection at about 8 days (range 6-13, n = 20) in each of the 3 control groups (P < 0.0001). By comparison with acutely rejecting allografts in the control untreated group at day 7 post-Tx, allografts in rats receiving the combined perioperative spleen cell/CsA treatment showed (1) significantly reduced graft cellularity and interstitial edema; (2) significantly decreased features of immune activation, including infiltration by mononuclear cells expressing IL-2R or proliferating cell nuclear antigen; (3) decreased intragraft expression of the cytokines IL-2 and IFN-gamma; and (4) suppression of endothelial activation as evidenced by both failure of up-regulation of intracellular adhesion molecule-1 and maintenance of thrombomodulin expression by graft endothelium. Analysis of sections of recipients' spleens showed that spleen cell/CsA therapy led to significant reductions versus untreated controls, in expression of IL-2, IFN-gamma, and IL-2R. Similarly, mixed lymphocyte response cultures showed that responder cells from rats receiving combined therapy proliferated by 93-95% less than untreated animals. Our results suggest that the efficacy of this clinically relevant protocol is associated with suppression of IL-2 or IFN-gamma protein production, and that in the absence of such molecules, it appears that T cell-receptor occupancy by alloantigens readily induces a state of anergy in vivo.
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PMID:Mechanism of a clinically relevant protocol to induce tolerance of cardiac allografts. Perioperative donor spleen cells plus cyclosporine suppress IL-2 and interferon-gamma production. 827 94

We have evaluated the effect of human Igs for intravenous use (IVIg) on the onset and development of experimental autoimmune uveoretinitis (EAU), a T cell-dependent autoimmune disease induced in rats by a single immunization with retinal S-antigen (S-Ag). Five consecutive daily infusions of IVIg, starting on the same day as S-Ag immunization, protected (Lewis x Brown-Norway) F1 rats against EAU. The prevention of EAU was IVIg-specific, i.e. mediated by pooled human IgG from multiple donors, since neither infusions of BSA nor infusions of pooled Ig from only two healthy individuals were effective. Treatment with IVIg decreased lymphocyte proliferative and antibody responses to S-Ag and the proliferative response to concanavalin A. Lack of proliferation was not dependent upon generation of suppressor cells. Lymph node (LN) cells from IVIg-treated and S-Ag-immunized animals neither proliferated nor secreted IL-2 in response to S-Ag but proliferated when co-cultured with LN cells from rats immunized with S-Ag. Our findings are compatible with an induction of a state of functional inactivation/anergy of T lymphocytes by infusions of IVIg. This functional inactivation may be due to the presence in IVIg of antibodies that bind both in vivo and in vitro to rat lymphocytes. Results from the present study suggest a novel mechanism by which IVIg may be beneficial in human autoimmune diseases.
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PMID:Human immunoglobulin preparations for intravenous use prevent experimental autoimmune uveoretinitis. 831 26

In in vivo allogeneic bone marrow transplantation studies with the Brown Norway (BN) rat as recipient and the WAG/Rij rat as allogeneic donor a significant graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect is observed. Studies were performed to investigate whether lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells play a role in this GVL effect. Splenocytes from WAG/Rij and BN rats were activated in vitro by recombinant human interleukin-2 (rhIL-2) for 5-6 days. The cytolytic activity of these LAK cells was tested on four rat solid tumor cell lines, i.e. an ureter carcinoma, a rhabdomyosarcoma, and two lung tumors, and on leukemic cells derived from the BN rat acute myelocytic leukemia (BNML) and the WAG/Rij acute lymphocytic leukemia (L4415). The panel of target cells also included the murine cell lines P815 and YAC. Both WAG/Rij and BN LAK cells were not capable of lysing the leukemic cells in contrast to significant cytolytic activity on the rat solid tumor cell lines and P815 and YAC. BNML cells showed to be resistant to lysis by human NK cells. Phenotypical analysis of the rat LAK population revealed a decrease in the CD4/CD8 ratio compared to the unstimulated splenocyte population. Rat LAK cells displayed no antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) on the leukemic cells, whereas IL-2-stimulated human peripheral blood cells showed moderate ADCC activity on the leukemic cells. To investigate whether cytokines play a role in lysis of leukemic target cells, graded numbers of LAK cells and leukemic cells were co-cultivated for seven days in an agar-based colony culture system. This resulted in moderate suppression of leukemic colony formation. From the current in vitro studies it appears that the graft-versus-leukemia observed in in vivo allogeneic bone marrow transplantation studies is probably not due to a direct leukemic cell kill by LAK cells.
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PMID:In vitro resistance of the brown Norway rat acute myelocytic leukemia (BNML) to lymphokine-activated killer activity. 848 27

Human recombinant interleukin-10 (IL-10) was previously shown to inhibit accessory cell (AC)-dependent proliferation of bovine parasite-specific T helper 1 (Th1), Th2, and Th0 cells in an IL-2-reversible manner (Brown, W.C., Woods, V.M., Chitko-McKown, C.G., Hash, S.M., and Rice-Ficht, A.C., 1994. Infect. Immun. 62, 4697-4708). The present study was therefore designed to determine whether the effect of IL-10 on T cell proliferation corresponded with downregulated expression of cytokines, or their receptors, important for T cell growth. The effects of IL-10 on cellular proliferation and expression of IL-2, IL-4, IL-2 receptor (IL-2R; p55), and IFN-gamma by Babesia bovis- or Fasciola hepatica-specific Th cell clones were simultaneously evaluated. As shown previously, IL-10 strongly inhibited proliferation of all types of Th cell clones, although this did not correspond with reduced expression of IL-2 or IL-4 mRNA or their products. In contrast, expression of IL-2R mRNA was consistently reduced in the IL-10-treated clones. These results indicate that IL-10 does not inhibit AC-dependent proliferation of bovine Th cells by downregulating T cell cytokines; rather, IL-10 may act by downregulating IL-2R p55 expression and subsequent signal transduction leading to decreased cellular proliferation. IFN-gamma production was also consistently downregulated in the presence of IL-10.
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PMID:Interleukin-10 downregulates proliferation and expression of interleukin-2 receptor p55 chain and interferon-gamma, but not interleukin-2 or interleukin-4, by parasite-specific helper T cell clones obtained from cattle chronically infected with Babesia bovis or Fasciola hepatica. 856 14

It is now currently thought that Th1 autoreactive cells may induce organ specific autoimmune disease and in these situations Th2 cells are considered as regulatory cells. However, in other situations Th2 cells may be pathogenic. Thus, some chemicals (HgCl2, gold salts or D-penicillamine) may induce Th2-mediated systemic autoimmune disorders in susceptible Brown-Norway (BN) rats. In contrast, HgCl2 induces non antigen specific immunosuppression in Lewis (LEW) rats and protects this strain against organ-specific autoimmune diseases such as experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). Anti-self MHC class II T cells have been detected in both susceptible and resistant strains upon exposure with these chemicals. Autoreactive T cell lines that recognize self MHC class II molecules have been derived from gold salt-injected BN rats (BNAu lines) and from HgCl2-injected LEW rats (LEWHg lines). BNAu T cell lines produced IL-4 and transferred antibody-mediated autoimmunity in BN rats deprived of CD8+ cells. In contrast, HgCl2 protects susceptible rats from Th1-mediated autoimmunity, (autoimmune uveoretinitis). LEWHg lines produced IL-2, IFN-gamma and TGF-beta and were able to protect LEW rats against cell-mediated autoimmunity (EAE) and (LEW x BN)F1 hybrids from antibody-mediated, HgCl2-induced autoimmunity. Several points will be discussed: the specificity of these autoreactive T cells, the mechanisms by which chemicals may induce these cells and the mechanisms by which the immune system maintains or reestablishes self tolerance in rats exposed to these agents.
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PMID:Th2 and Th1 autoreactive anti-class II cell lines in the rat suppress or induce autoimmunity. 873 66

Lethally irradiated Lewis (LEW) rats reconstituted with syngeneic bone marrow and given CsA for a 4-week period, develop, upon withdrawal of CsA, a graft-versus-host-like disease, so-called CsA-induced autoimmunity (CsA-AI). This T cell-mediated autoimmune disease is thymus-dependent; it is generally held that this disease is a consequence of aberrant T cell recovery brought about by CsA. In this study we determined mononuclear cell subsets phenotypically by tri-colour flow cytometry. A strong decrease in recent thymic emigrants (Thy1.1+, TCR alpha beta +) was observed as a consequence of CsA treatment, eventually resulting in decreased absolute peripheral T cell numbers. In these rats no altered CD4:CD8 T cell ratio was observed before onset of CsA-AI; CD4+ and CD8+ cells consisted predominantly of monocytes (CD4dim+, TCR alpha beta-) and natural killer cells (CD8+, TCR alpha beta-), respectively. LEW rats, x-irradiated, syngeneic bone marrow-reconstituted and treated with CsA, showed a marked and persistent, relative expansion of mature CD45RC+, RT6- Th cells. In contrast, Brown-Norway rats treated in a similar fashion, or LEW rats subjected to either CsA treatment or x-irradiation, did not show a comparable expansion of mature CD45RC+, RT6- Th cells, nor did these animals develop CsA-AI. The CD45RC+, RT6- Th cells produced IL-2, and moreover constituted the only Th subset producing IFN-gamma upon stimulation, and therefore were considered as Th1-like effector cells. These results are consistent with the view that a persistent preponderance of Th1 cells and not the mere presence of autoreactive cells determines whether or not clinically manifest CsA-AI will occur.
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PMID:Susceptibility to clinically manifest cyclosporine A (CsA)-induced autoimmune disease is associated with interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-producing CD45RC+RT6- T helper cells. 880 39

To assess whether Th-2 cytokines are involved in the late airway response (LR) after antigen challenge, we evaluated cytokine mRNA expression in the lungs of two strains of rats before and 8 h after saline or antigen challenge: Brown Norway (BN) rats, high IgE producers that develop LR after antigen challenge and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats, low IgE producers that develop little LR and no increased airway responsiveness after antigen challenge. Rats were sensitized with ovalbumin (OA) and 14 days later, lungs were obtained before or after OA challenge and measurement of lung physiology for 8 h. Lung tissue was either fixed for in situ hybridization or frozen for evaluation of mRNA expression by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). We examined mRNA expression for interleukin-4 (IL-4), and IL-5 (Th-2 cytokines) and IL-2 and interferon gamma (IFN-gamma, Th-1 cytokines). In situ hybridization showed that cells expressing IL-4 and -5 mRNA were increased in the airways of the lungs of BN rats after OA challenge (P < 0.05) and that cells expressing mRNA for IFN-gamma and IL-2 were higher in SD than in BN rats after antigen challenge (P < 0.05). Results from PCR showed that prior to antigen challenge, BN rats expressed in their lungs mRNA for IL-4 and -5 and SD rats expressed very little mRNA for IL-5 only. After antigen challenge most BN and SD rats expressed mRNA for IL-4 and -5 but expression of mRNA for IL-2 and IFN-gamma was only found in SD rats. In conclusion, rats that develop a LR after antigen challenge preferentially increase Th-2 cytokine expression in their lungs whereas those without LRs preferentially express Th-1 cytokines. Our results support the role of Th-2 cytokines in the LR and asthma.
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PMID:Cytokine expression in the presence or absence of late airway responses after antigen challenge of sensitized rats. 881 Jun 41

Lewis (LEW) rats received (Lewis x Brown Norway)F1 (LBNF1) small intestinal allografts (SIT) with graft venous drainage to either the portal vein (pv) or inferior vena cava (iv), along with immunization (pv or iv) with irradiated LBNF1 spleen cells. As reported earlier, in rats with pv drained grafts there was an increase in gammadeltaTCR+ cells infiltrating the Peyer's patches (PP) and mesenteric lymph node (MLN) compared with iv drained grafts. After restimulation in culture with irradiated LBNF1 spleen stimulator cells these PP and MLN cells from SIT rats with pv graft drainage were a prominent source of TGFbeta, IL-4, and IL-10. When subpopulations of cells from PP preparations were analyzed, an enriched (<2%betaTCR+) gammadeltaTCR+ population from SIT rats with pv graft drainage, but not iv drainage, was detected that suppressed in vitro type-1 cytokine production (IL-2, IFNgamma) from alphabetaTCR+ (<2%gammadeltaTCR+) cells derived from the MLN or peripheral lymph nodes (PLN) of these same animals. On adoptive transfer to naive LEW rats simultaneously receiving LBNF1 SIT, gammadeltaTCR+ enriched PP cells from these primary donors (pv immunized, SIT rats with pv graft drainage) produced prolonged graft/ animal survival compared with PP cells obtained from primary donors that had iv drained grafts. In addition, simultaneous infusion of anti-gammadeltaTCR monoclonal antibody into SIT rats with pv graft drainage blocked the graft enhancement normally seen in these animals. These data are consistent with an important role for type-2 cytokine producing gammadeltaTCR+ cells in the regulation of graft rejection in this model.
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PMID:A role for gamma(delta)TCR+ cells in regulation of rejection of small intestinal allografts in rats. 882 87

Mercuric chloride (HgCl2) has contrasting effects on different rat strains: susceptible strains, e.g. Brown Norway (BN) develop polyclonal B cell activation, multiple autoantibodies and widespread tissue injury. Lewis (LEW) rats are resistant: no autoimmune response occurs after HgCl2; instead, there is immunosuppression. We have previously shown, by fully quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR), up-regulation of interleukin-4 (IL-4) gene expression in HgCl2-treated BN rats, implicating Th2 cells in the autoimmune syndrome. Involvement of the reciprocal Th1 subset, producing interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), in resistance of LEW rats to HgCl2 has been suggested. We now report extensive analysis of Th1 and Th2 cytokine gene expression in spleen and lymph nodes of susceptible (BN) and resistant (LEW) rats after HgCl2. IL-4 and IFN-gamma were analyzed by quantitative PCR, other cytokines were assessed using semiquantitative PCR: the relative merits of these two techniques are discussed. We show pronounced up-regulation of IL-4 and more modest up-regulation of IFN-gamma in BN rats, but no up-regulation of either in LEW rats. Baseline levels of IFN-gamma were higher in Lew rats. Semiquantitative PCR showed increased expression of IL-2, IL-6 and IL-10 in BN; in LEW rats only IL-10 was increased. There was no marked change in IL-5, IL-13 or transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) in either strain. These data further support the key role of IL-4 in HgCl2-induced autoimmunity, and suggest that failure of up-regulation of IL-4, together with higher baseline IFN-gamma expression, accounts for resistance of LEW rats to HgCl2. However, neither IFN-gamma nor TGF-beta can be implicated in HgCl2-induced immunosuppression in the LEW rat in vivo: our data suggest a role for IL-10 in this phenomenon.
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PMID:Th1/Th2 cytokine gene expression after mercuric chloride in susceptible and resistant rat strains. 889 50

Late allergic airway responses can be transferred by CD4+ T cells in the rat. To investigate the role of T-cell cytokines in these responses, we examined the expression of mRNA for Th2 (interleukin [IL]-4 and IL-5) and Th1 (IL-2 and interferon gamma [INF-gamma])-type cytokines in Brown Norway rats that were administered either antigen-primed W3/25(CD4)+ or OX8(CD8)+ T cells. Donors were actively sensitized by subcutaneous injection of ovalbumin (OVA) in the neck and T cells were obtained from the cervical lymph nodes by immunomagnetic cell sorting for administration to unsensitized rats. Control rats received bovine serum albumin (BSA)-primed CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Two days later, recipient rats were challenged with aerosolized OVA, and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) was performed 8 h after challenge. BAL cells expressing mRNA for IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, and INF-gamma were analyzed using the technique of in situ hybridization. Recipients of OVA-primed CD4+ T cells had an increase in the fraction of BAL cells expressing mRNA for IL-4 and IL-5 compared with BSA-primed CD4+ or OVA-primed CD8+ cells (P < 0.001). Recipients of CD8+ T cells had an increase in INF-gamma mRNA expression after OVA challenge compared with recipients of BSA-primed-CD8+ or OVA-primed CD4+ T cells (P < 0.001). In conclusion, T-cell-dependent allergen-induced late responses are associated with the expression of mRNA for IL-4 and IL-5, indicating Th2 cell activation. Furthermore, the increased expression of INF-gamma in allergen challenge recipients of antigen-primed CD8+ T cells suggests that CD8+ T cells may be important in modulating allergic responses.
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PMID:Adoptively transferred late allergic airway responses are associated with Th2-type cytokines in the rat. 899 81


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