In patients infected with Trichophyton rubrum, the T lymphocyte responses (lymphocyte transformation) to trichophytin were reduced, compared with control subjects. The same levels were seen in patients with intractable chronic infection and those who responded well to treatment but the site of infection affected the immune response, lower levels being seen in patients with palmo-plantar infection than in those with groin infections. In infections coursed by T. mentagrophytes by contrast, lymphocyte responses to specific antigens were significantly increased.
A deficiency of prostacyclin (PGI2) production by the vascular endothelium might underline the severe vasoconstriction and intravascular thrombosis that characterise meningococcal shock. The effect on PGI2 synthesis by human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) in culture was examined in sera from children with meningococcal shock, healthy adults, and children with other febrile illnesses. In comparision with adult controls, PGI2 synthesis was reduced when HUVEC were incubated with the sera from 10 of 13 patients with meningococcal shock. A similar defect was observed with only four of 20 sera from children with other febrile illnesses. The effect of sera from patients with meningococcal shock on HUVEC was reversible with normal serum, and seems to be due to the absence of a factor necessary for PGI2 production rather than an inhibitor.These findings suggest that a deficiency of PGI2 may have a role in the pathogenesis of meningococcal shock and that exogenous PGI2 may be of therapeutic benefit.
Endothelial glycosaminoglycans are important in a diverse range of vascular functions. In the course of a biochemical and histological study exploring the role of glycosaminoglycans in inflammation, we have investigated the use of gold-conjugated poly-L-lysine with silver enhancement to establish the nature and physical location of glycosaminoglycans on the surface of cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Cationic gold was effective in locating anionic sites in both cultured endothelial cells and in paraffin-embedded renal tissue. By manipulating pH, and by using enzymes specific for degrading glycosaminoglycans, it was found that, at pH 1.2, staining was directed primarily at glycosaminoglycans. The surface of human umbilical vein endothelial cells was found to be extensively covered in heparan sulphate, the histological appearance of which was dependent upon the fixation procedure employed. Heparan sulphate was also seen to co-distribute with the extracellular matrix protein, fibronectin, when endothelial cultures were simultaneously stained with cationic gold and an antibody to cellular fibronectin.
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