Previous studies suggested that trinitrophenyl (TNP)-modified syngeneic red cells induced humoral autoimmune response in mice with defective T cell function but not in normal mice. The ability of modified self antigen to induce autoimmune response in immunodeficient mice was further explored using the delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) as an assay system. Mice were immunized with syngeneic TNP-modified spleen cells (TNP-SC) and challenged by syngeneic nonmodified concanavalin A (Con A) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated spleen cells injected into their footpads. The DTH response was assessed 24, 48 and 72 h later by measuring the footpad swelling and was transferred to naive recipients with enriched T cells from TNP-SC-immunized irradiated A mice but not with serum or non-T cells. Adult thymectomized, X-irradiated (250 rds) and cyclophosphamide-treated mice injected with syngeneic TNP-SC generated a DTH response when subsequently challenged with syngeneic lymphoblasts (induced with Con A or LPS) but not when challenged with allogeneic blast cells. In contrast, normal mice treated in a similar manner exhibited a much less significant DTH response. SC incubated 1 to 3 h with Con A failed to elicit the DTH response of immunodeficient mice previously injected with TNP-SC. Both lymphoblasts that were induced in vitro with Con A diluted in fetal calf serum or in normal mouse serum-containing media, and lymphoblasts that were induced in vivo by interleukin 2 elicited DTH responses in X-irradiated, TNP-SC immunized mice. The syngeneic DTH response of the immunodeficient mice injected with TNP-SC was abrogated when they were simultaneously transplanted with syngeneic SC or nylon wool-passed syngeneic SC. If the transplanted splenocytes had been treated with anti-Thy-1 antiserum and complement they failed to abrogate the syngeneic-DTH response of the above mentioned mice. This result suggests that suppressor cells are programmed to control the autoimmune response induced with modified self antigens.
Twenty-two male volunteers in Jerusalem were subjected to a battery of psychological tests at the height of the Iraqi Scud missile attacks on Israeli cities during the 1991 Persian Gulf War and again after the cessation of hostilities. Venous blood samples were taken at each time point. The separated mononuclear cells and plasma were cryopreserved, and a spectrum of immunological and neuroendocrine assays were performed on the preserved samples. Psychological testing indicated levels of anxiety were higher during the war than they were after the war ended, and both anxiety and anger during the hostilities were significantly elevated in comparison with prewar data. During the war, specific war-related pressures were greater than everyday pressures, and problem-focused coping was more evident than emotion-focused coping. Natural-killer cell activity and cell-mediated lympholysis were significantly elevated during the war, as were plasma levels of adrenocorticotrophic hormone, neurotensin, and substance P. The only biological test parameter found to be reduced during the war period was mononuclear cell thymidine incorporated in nonstimulated cultures.
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