Changes in the reactivity of the ileum (to histamine and barium chloride) and vas deferens (to acetylchohne and barium chloride), isolated from actively egg albumen-sensitized guinea pigs, have been investigated. The study was performed on 2 guinea pig strains: the Dunkin-Hartley strain, usually used as an airway allergic model, and the BFA strain. In actively sensitized guinea pigs of both strains, concentration-response curves exhibited a significant dose-dependent upward shift compared to those obtained in control guinea pigs. The maximal contraction strength calculated from these curves was significantly enhanced in both sensitized guinea pig strains, without a change in EC50 values. This study showed that the active antigen sensitization procedure involved several smooth muscle functions, and not exclusively the trachea.
The present results show that the in vitro application of purified IgG1 can produce non-specific smooth muscle hyperreactivity and hypersensitivity. So, IgG1 can be considered as the main factor involved in the genesis of sensitization-induced hyperresponsiveness, and probably play a great role in hyperreactivity observed during allergic diseases and anaphylaxis.
Anti-islet immunity was studied in six spontaneously insulin-dependent diabetic (IDD) dogs, using mouse islets of Langerhans cells as targets, in vitro. Insulinopenia was demonstrated in all dogs by an i.v. glucose tolerance test. A significant lymphocytopenia was detected in the peripheral blood of this diabetic group. Pancreatic tissue from one of these animals was obtained shortly after death and the islets displayed a marked loss in beta cells without significant changes in the other types of islet cells. No insulitis was observed. Circulating mononuclear cells from the diabetic dogs induced an increased basal insulin (IRI) release from islet cells and a suppressed stimulated IRI release. Damage to or depth of beta cells may account for these findings. The stimulated IRI release was also suppressed when islets were incubated with the diabetic sera + complement, while the D-cell response to arginine was not altered, and the A-cell response was reduced but not abolished. A lysis of islet cells in the presence of IDD sera + complement was demonstrated by an increased release of 51Cr from labeled cells. These anomalies were observed neither when complement was heat-inactivated nor in the presence of control sera + complement. Canine IDD may be a new animal model for the study of anti-islet cellular and humoral immunities.
Isolated mouse vas deferens preparations were used to study the effect of temperature on noradrenaline-induced contractions. Preparations were suspended in the organ bath containing Krebs-Henseleit solution for isometric tension recording. Contractile responses to noradrenaline were investigated in the mouse vas deferens after moderate cooling from 37 to 26 or 22 degrees C. A significant increase of the phasic contractions to noradrenaline was observed at 26 or 22 degrees C compared with responses obtained at 37 degrees C (about 12.3 and 35.6% increase at 26 and 22 degrees C, respectively). The secondary noradrenaline-induced sustained contraction was also significantly enhanced after moderate cooling to 26 degrees C. The potentiation of noradrenaline-induced contraction at 26 degrees C remained in a Ca(2+)-free EGTA (1 mM)-containing solution. However, sustained contraction was suppressed after removal of the calcium from the medium at 37 and 26 degrees C. Contraction to caffeine was significantly enhanced at 22 degrees C compared with 37 degrees C. By contrast, barium chloride-induced contraction of the vas deferens was markedly decreased after moderate cooling to 22 degrees C. In the presence of ouabain (0.1 mM), the noradrenaline-induced peak contraction was significantly increased at 37 degrees C. However, potentiation of the noradrenaline response at 22 degrees C was unaffected by the Na+/K+ pump inhibitor. Noradrenaline-induced peak contractions were depressed in the presence of vanadate (1 mM) and cyclopiazonic acid (10 microM), two Ca(2+)-ATPase inhibitors, at 37 degrees C and also at 22 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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