Effect of Hypothalamic Lesions on Experimental Autoimmune Diseases in Rats

Abstract
The development of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) was prevented in rats immunized with encephalitogenic antigen two weeks, but not twelve weeks, after stereotaxic electrolytic destruction of the anterior hypothalamus. Serum antibody level to the antigen myelin basic protein was decreased, and in vitro lymphocyte transformation response to a mitogen was increased. On the other hand, incidence and intensity of chronic experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG) induced by acetylcholine receptor immunization were higher in rats with anterior hypothalamic lesion. In addition, expression of EAE in rats was inhibited when dopamine and norepinephrine in brain were depleted due to intraventricular injection of 6-hydroxydopamine or subcutaneous injection of reserpine. The study indicates hypothalamic modulatory effects on autoimmune response as well as possible involvement of neurotransmitters in this kind of neuroimmunomodulation.