Spontaneous recovery of rats from experimental allergic encephalomyelitis is dependent on regulation of the immune system by endogenous adrenal corticosteroids.
Open Access
- 1 February 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 169 (2) , 431-445
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.169.2.431
Abstract
Lewis rats with experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE), induced either by the subcutaneous injection of guinea pig myelin basic protein (MBP) or by the adoptive transfer of MBP-primed spleen cells, suffer from a single episode of paralysis from which they recover spontaneously. Animals developing EAE were found to have greatly elevated levels of corticosterone in the blood. This endogenous increase in steroid production was accompanied by lymphopenia and depressed delayed-type hypersensitivity responses to OVA, indicating that rats with EAE are immunosuppressed in an antigen-nonspecific fashion. Adrenalectomized rats given subcutaneous implants of corticosterone to maintain basal steroid levels invariably died when EAE was induced. However, if the steroid replacement therapy was adjusted to mimic the hormone levels that were observed in intact rats developing EAE, then the disease followed a nonfatal course closely resembling that seen in the nonadrenalectomized controls. Replacement therapy that achieved serum corticosterone levels slightly higher than those found in intact rats with EAE virtually suppressed the disease completely. It is concluded that endogenous corticosterone release in rats with EAE plays an essential role in the spontaneous recovery that is observed in this condition. However, the subsequent refractory phase that is characteristic of rats that have recovered from EAE induced by active immunization with MBP is not associated with chronically elevated corticosterone levels. This finding is discussed in the light of other data that suggest that unlike the spontaneous recovery, the refractory state has an immunological basis rather than an endocrinological basis.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Physiology and pathology of an immunoendocrine feedback loopImmunology Today, 1988
- Adrenalectomy sensitizes mice to the lethal effects of interleukin 1 and tumor necrosis factor.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1988
- Chemical sympathectomy augments the severity of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis☆Journal of Neuroimmunology, 1988
- In vivo depletion of Lyt-2 cells fails to alter acute and relapsing EAEJournal of Neuroimmunology, 1988
- Release of Multiple Hormones by a Direct Action of Interleukin-1 on Pituitary CellsScience, 1987
- The mechanism of inhibition of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in the rat by monoclonal antibody against CD4Journal of Neuroimmunology, 1986
- Immunoregulatory Feedback Between Interleukin-1 and Glucocorticoid HormonesScience, 1986
- Subcutaneous implantation method for chronic glucocorticoid replacement therapyPhysiology & Behavior, 1979
- Cell‐mediated immunity to myelin basic protein in Lewis rats made unresponsive to experimental allergic encephalomyelitisEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1978
- Depression of Lymphocyte Content of Thoracic Duct Lymph by Adrenocorticotrophic HormoneScience, 1945