Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P14784 (IL-2 receptor)
3,849 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

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.
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PMID:The role of interleukin 2 in the development of autoimmune thyroiditis. 148 52

The aim of these experiments was to analyse the functional roles of phenotypically defined T cells from Buffalo strain rats with immunisation or neonatal thymectomy-induced autoimmune thyroiditis. Rats were depleted either of CD8-positive T cells by administration of the Ox8 monoclonal antibody or of activated T cells by administration of low-dose cyclosporin A (Cs A) with an anti-IL-2 receptor monoclonal antibody (ART-18), and the effects on subsequent disease assessed. Even though animals were not completely depleted of Ox8 cells, immunisation-induced thyroiditis was enhanced by Ox8 treatment, whereas thyroglobulin antibodies were reduced compared with controls. Subtherapeutic doses of either Cs A or ART-18 alone had little effect on thymectomy-induced thyroiditis, in contrast to Cs A and ART-18 in conjunction, which prevented disease developing. These results suggest important roles for CD8-positive and IL-2 receptor-bearing T cells in experimental autoimmune thyroiditis.
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PMID:The effect of T cell subset depletion on autoimmune thyroiditis in the Buffalo strain rat. 214 Aug 14

In hypothyroid patients serum soluble IL-2 receptor levels showed scattered and conflicting results. In our report we studied circulating soluble interleukin 2 receptors in 22 patients with hypothyroid autoimmune thyroiditis before L-thyroxine treatment and when the patients became euthyroid. The mean of soluble Interleukin 2 receptor levels in the hypothyroid state was 48.6 pmol/l (95% confidence interval, 45.6-51.5) statistically lower than in the controls (95% confidence interval, 86.4 pmol/l, 83.3-89.4) (p < 0.0001). When the patients became euthyroid during L-thyroxine treatment, soluble Interleukin 2 receptor levels increased, showing mean values comparable to the controls. A positive high correlation (p < 0.001) was observed between soluble Interleukin 2 receptor levels and thyroxine free levels in the hypothyroid as well as in the euthyroid state and between soluble Interleukin 2 receptors and the mean weekly L-thyroxine dose. Our study confirmed that in the hypothyroid state, the behaviour of soluble Interleukin 2 receptors is anomalous as compared to other autoimmune diseases. In fact a strict relationship exists between the levels of thyroid hormones and soluble Interleukin 2 receptors but not between the latter and antithyroid antibodies. These results agree with those supporting a role for thyroid hormones in the regulation of the immune system. They also suggest that the measurement of soluble Interleukin 2 receptors could be used as a marker of the peripheral action of thyroid hormones.
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PMID:Circulating soluble IL-2 receptor levels are low in patients with hypothyroid autoimmune thyroiditis. 787 52

Although it is well known that patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus are susceptible to other autoimmune diseases, the simultaneous occurrence of clustered distinct autoimmune diseases is uncommon. We report a 16-year-old girl, previously diagnosed as having coeliac disease and IgA deficiency, who at 13 years of age developed a clustering of distinct autoimmune diseases, including type 1 diabetes mellitus, rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and euthyroid autoimmune thyroiditis, eventually resulting in a simultaneous long-term remission. The clinical picture was associated with a functional immunodeficiency characterized by a defect in proliferative responses to T cell predominant mitogens and a normal response to the B cell predominant mitogen. In addition, the T cell activation markers HLA-DR, IL-2 receptor and transferrin receptor) were not upregulated. The clinical course of this immunodeficiency paralleled the outcome of the autoimmune diseases. After the abrupt onset, spontaneous clinical remission of both diabetes mellitus and RA was observed. Insulin was first reduced in dose and then discontinued completely at 15 months, in the presence of normal C peptide secretion and normal metabolic control (HbA1c 5.8%). Anti-glutamate decarboxylase (GAD65) and anti-IA-2 antibodies remained persistently high. During the remission phase a normalization of the functional immune defect was observed. The gradual resolution of the multisystemic diseases as well as the normalization of immune function in our patient is unusual. This case may be of considerable value in furthering our knowledge of the immunological mechanisms implicated in these rare multireactive syndromes.
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PMID:Simultaneous peripubertal onset of multireactive autoimmune diseases with an unusual long-lasting remission of type 1 diabetes mellitus. 1110 28