A number of assays were performed to assess immunologic function in 28 patients with clinically well-defined schizophrenia. Our data provide laboratory evidence that patients with schizophrenia have characteristics consistent with an autoimmune process, directed to components of the brain, which may participate in either the pathogenesis or etiology of schizophrenia. One-third of our patients had a clinically evident autoimmune syndrome unrelated to their psychiatric illness. Of the nine patients with an autoimmune disease, two had one autoantibody in their serum and five had more than one autoantibodies. Twelve of eighteen patients without clinical evidence of autoimmune disease had no detectable autoantibodies. Mitogenic responses to PHA and PWM were significantly reduced in the patient population when compared to controls. Fifty percent of the patients had an increased percentage (greater than 5%) of blood-borne HLA-DR (+) OKT4 (+) T-helper lymphocytes. Immune reactivity toward brain antigens was sought by measuring lymphocyte transformation to a saline extract of frontal lobe, and by immunoblotting of antigens extracted from frontal lobe, cingulate gyrus, interventricular septum, and hippocampus. Lymphocyte transformation did not reveal differences between patient and control groups. Normal sera were found to contain antibody to some of these brain antigens. However, patients with schizophrenia had antibody to antigens of the hippocampus, septal region and cingulate gyrus which were not encountered during analysis of normal sera.
During lactation, endocrine function is altered and stress responses are dampened. Stress effects on immune function are partially determined by endocrine factors; therefore, we assessed whether stress similarly alters immune function during lactation. Sprague-Dawley rats were conditioned by exposure to a tone paired with foot shock (2 sessions, 16 shocks each) prior to breeding or were left undisturbed. Lactating (day 10) (Lac) and nonlactating diestrous virgin controls (C) were killed immediately after reexposure to the tone or removal from their home cage. Plasma corticosterone stress responses were dampened in Lac relative to C animals. Peripheral blood lymphocyte proliferation to T cell receptor antibody stimulation was reduced to a similar extent in both experimental groups. Conditioned stress reduced splenocyte proliferation and increased nitrite accumulation in C animals, but not in Lac animals. Mesenteric lymph node lymphocyte proliferation was significantly increased after stress in Lac compared with C animals. Both plasma interleukin-6 (IL-6) and phytohemagglutinin-stimulated splenic IL-6 production were increased in Lac animals compared with C animals after stress exposure. These data indicate that stress-induced alterations may be determined by different regulatory mechanisms within immune compartments and that these effects depend on the physiological state of the organism.
Homosexual men were studied for associations among human T-lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV-III) infection, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection, and T cell abnormalities. The presence of IgG antibody to EBV capsid antigen and antibody to EBV early antigen was significantly associated with augmented counts of suppressor T cells in healthy HTLV-III-seronegative men. HTLV-III-seropositive asymptomatic subjects had significantly enhanced titers of antibody to EBV and lower ratios of helper to suppressor T cells compared with HTLV-III-seronegative homosexual men. Of three men who seroconverted to HTLV-III, two had a greater than fourfold increase in titer of IgG antibody to EBV capsid antigen after seroconversion. These results suggest that the interaction of HTLV-III and EBV and their immunologic perturbations are significant in the natural history of this retrovirus infection in homosexual men.
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