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Immunologic, histologic, and virologic features of herpesvirus-induced stromal keratitis in cats
1995
Nasisse, M.P. | English, R.V. | Tompkins, M.B. | Guy, J.S. | Sussman, W.
Sequential histologic, immunologic, and virologic features of herpesvirus-induced keratitis were studied in 18 experimentally infected cats. Histologic changes were assessed by use of light microscopy, and the presence of viral antigen, B lymphocytes, and T lymphocytes was verified immunohistochemically. Flow cytometry was used to monitor changes in blood T lymphocytes (CD4 and CD8 homologues) and B lymphocytes. Cellular immunity was assessed by use of the lymphocyte proliferation assay. Development of stromal keratitis was preceded by prolonged absence of corneal epithelium, decreased numbers of circulating lymphocyte subsets, decreased mitogen responses, and acquisition of viral antigen by the corneal stroma. Return to normal of circulating lymphocyte numbers and function was temporally associated with the arrival of neutrophils and B and T lymphocytes in the corneal stroma. Sequelae to stromal inflammation were fibrosis and scarring. Findings suggest that suppression of local immune responses allows virus access to the corneal stroma, and that subsequent keratitis is mediated by an immune response to viral antigen.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Inhibition of equine mononuclear cell proliferation and leukotriene B4 synthesis by a specific 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor, A-63162
1992
Olsen, S.C. | Atluru, D. | Atluru, S. | McVey, D.S. | Erickson, H.H.
The lipoxygenase metabolites of arachidonic acid have an important role in lymphocyte activation. We used a specific 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor, A-63162, to examine the role of 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) in equine blood mononuclear cell (BMC) proliferation and leukotriene B4 (LTB4) synthesis after stimulation with mitogen (phytohemagglutinin, PHA) or calcium ionophore (A23187). The A-63162 inhibited PHA-induced equine BMC proliferation and, at the same concentration, also inhibited A23187-induced LTB4 synthesis. The presence of exogenous interleukin 2 (IL-2) or the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin, failed to reverse the immunosuppression caused by A-63162. Further, we found that A-63162, at the concentration that inhibited BMC proliferation and LTB4 synthesis, had no effect on BMC viability. The addition of the specific protein kinase C inhibitor, H-7, did not inhibit A23187-induced LTB4 synthesis. Results indicate that 5-lipoxygenase metabolites may have an important role in equine lymphocyte activation and that protein kinase C has no role in regulating LTB4 production after A23187 stimulation.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Neutrophil activation associated with increased neutrophil acyloxyacyl hydrolase activity during inflammation in cattle
1992
McDermott, C. | Fenwick, B.
Acyloxyacyl hydrolase (AOAH) is a lysosomal enzyme found in neutrophils and macrophages that acts to partially deacylate the lipid-A component of the endotoxin of gram-negative bacteria rendering it less toxic, yet maintaining much of its immunostimulatory potential. We have found that the activity of neutrophil AOAH per cell increased during localized inflammation. The purpose of this study was to determine the mechanism(s) responsible for these increases in neutrophil AOAH activity. Because changes in neutrophil maturity commonly are associated with inflammation, intravascular infusion of purified gram-negative bacterial lipopolysaccharide and SC injection of bovine recombinant granulocyte colony-stimulating factor was used to induce large numbers of circulating immature neutrophils. Immature neutrophils were found to have AOAH activity equal to that of mature cells; however, when neutrophils were stimulated in vitro with known activators, AOAH activity of activated cells was more than that of unstimulated cells. The increase in AOAH activity was inversely related to prestimulation activity. Increases in AOAH activity after neutrophil activation were not a result of de novo synthesis of the enzyme, because cycloheximide did not prevent activation-induced increases in activity.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Inhibition of lymphocyte blastogenesis by whey
1991
Barta, O. | Barta, V.D. | Crisman, M.V. | Akers, R.M.
Bovine whey samples were evaluated by use of lymphocyte-transformation tests to determine their effect on lymphocyte blastogenesis. Whey samples from mammary glands with clinical mastitis strongly inhibited DNA synthesis and blastogenesis in lymphocytes stimulated with mitogens or dividing because of bovine leukemia virus infection. Whey samples from apparently healthy glands either did not inhibit lymphocyte DNA synthesis or inhibited it to a lesser degree than did whey from mastitic glands. Degree of inhibition was dose-dependent. The molecules causing inhibition were noncytotoxic and underwent minimal binding to the lymphocytes. Inhibitory molecules were susceptible to various proteolytic and glycolytic enzymes, indicating a glycoprotein-like structure. Whey inhibited incorporation of thymidine if it was in the cell cultures during the early stages of stimulation. Incubation of lymphocytes in whey that inhibited thymidine incorporation did not affect DNA synthesis in subsequent culturing of the same cells without whey. Degree of inhibition was affected by the method of whey preparation.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Secretion of interleukin-1 by bovine milk macrophages
1991
Politis, I. | McBride, B.W. | Burton, J.H. | Zhao, X. | Turner, J.D.
The relative sensitivity of bovine blood monocytes and macrophages isolated from milk to lipopolysaccharide, with respect to interleukin 1 (IL-1) production, was evaluated. Addition of lipopolysaccharide (0 to 30 microgram/ml) to theculture medium resulted in increases in secreted and intra-cellular IL-1 activity for monocytes and milk macrophages, with maximal stimulation achieved at 30 microgram oflipopolysaccharide/ml of medium. At this concentration of lipopolysaccharide, monocytes released 76% of the total IL-1, whereas milk macrophages released only 26% of the total IL-1 produced within the cell. Secretion of a small quantity of IL-1 was a common property of macrophages isolated from healthy and mastitic quarters. We concluded that limited secretion of IL-1 may render the milk macrophages less efficient in promoting lymphocyte activation.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Evaluation of serologic and cellular immune responses of cattle to a nonlipopolysaccharide antigen from Brucella abortus
1990
Cows naturally infected with Brucella abortus developed antibody (Ab) responses to a nonlipopolysaccharide antigen (NLA) purified from B abortus strain 1119-3. Sera from strain 19-vaccinated cows did not have detectable amounts of Ab. Weak lymphoproliferative responses to NLA were observed in blood mononuclear cell suspensions obtained from infected cows. There was no evidence of NLA-specific lymphoproliferation in cell suspensions from healthy cows. Nonlipopolysaccharide antigen binding to bovine blood mononuclear cells was observed by antigen-consumption assays and direct binding of radiolabeled antigen. Cells from infected cows bound less NLA than did cells from healthy cows when assays were conducted with intact blood mononuclear cell preparations (monocytes plus lymphocytes). Monocytes obtained from any group did not bind NLA. Purified B lymphocytes from infected and healthy vaccinated cows bound about 3 times more NLA than did T lymphocytes, but there were no apparent differences between the 2 groups in extent of binding. Results of the study indicate that bovine lymphocytes have binding sites for a NLA purified from B abortus strain 1119-3.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Adverse immune reactions and the pathogenesis of Ostertagia ostertagi infections in calves
1990
Wiggin, C.J. | Gibbs, H.C.
The possible development of type-1 hypersensitivity reactions in the abomasal mucosa caused by soluble L3 products of Ostertagia ostertagi was studied in 4-month-old calves sensitized by repeated exposure to L3 over a 50-day period followed by anthelmintic treatment. Four groups each of 4 calves were used. Group 1 served as nonsensitized controls and group 2 as sensitized controls, group 3 was challenge exposed at 2-week intervals beginning at week 10 with a soluble L3 product (OAG), and group 4 was challenge exposed at 2-week intervals with an oral dose of L3, followed by anthelmintic treatment 3 days later. All calves infected with L3 became sensitized, as indicated by a positive reaction to an intradermal skin test. However, a passive cutaneous anaphylaxis was only partly effective in indicating the presence of homocytotropic antibody in the infected calves. Sensitized calves had significantly (P < 0.05) higher eosinophil counts and plasma pepsinogen values for the entire 14 weeks than uninfected controls. Globule leukocyte and mast cell counts from the abomasal mucosa were also significantly (P < 0.05) higher. Studies for possible immunomodulation revealed that lymphocyte counts decreased between every 2-week challenge-exposure period for groups-3 and -4 calves. A transient depression of blood lymphocyte (BL) responses to phytohemagglutinin (PHA), a T-cell mitogen, was observed over the first 8 weeks in the infected calves. Increases in BL responses to OAG were also observed. Differences were not observed in BL responses to pokeweed mitogen, a T- and B-cell mitogen. Blood lymphocyte responses to PHA in group-3 calves were low following the initial challenge exposure with OAG. The sensitized calf lymphocytes did not have suppressive activity on the response of control calf lymphocytes to PHA. Differences were not observed in lymphocyte responses to PHA in a suppressive assay done on abomasal lymph node lymphocytes. Increases in abomasal lymph node mass and lymphocyte responses to PHA, pokeweed mitogen, and OAG were observed in all sensitized calves. Histologic examination of abomasal lymph node sections from challenge-exposed calves revealed increased mitotic activity in germinal centers. Plasma pepsinogen values in groups 3 and 4 increased between each challenge exposure, which further suggested that type-1 hypersensitivity reactions had occurred in the abomasal mucosa, resulting in increased permeability and leakage of macromolecules.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Influence of isoprinosine on lymphocyte function in virus-infected feeder pigs
1989
Flaming, K.P. | Blecha, F. | Fedorka-Cray, P.J. | Anderson, G.A.
Pseudorabies is a porcine herpesvirus of major importance in the swine industry. Isoprinosine is an immunomodulating drug that has been shown to be beneficial in treating herpesvirus infections. Twenty-four 7-week-old pigs were allotted within litters to 1 of 4 groups: control, isoprinosine (ISO), pseudorabies virus (PRV), or isoprinosine and pseudorabies virus (ISO-PRV). Isoprinosine was administered daily for 16 days to the ISO and ISO-PRV groups (75 mg/kg of body weight/day, PO). Immunity in pigs in the PRV and ISO-PRV groups was challenged with pseudorabies virus (10(5) TCID50 units) on day 4. Rectal temperatures and viral excretion were monitored daily; total and differential leukocyte counts, lymphocyte response to mitogens, and interleukin-2 production were monitored every 4 days. Pigs challenge-inoculated with pseudorabies virus became ill, with the ISO-PRV group most severely affected. Rectal temperatures were high (P less than 0.05) in virally challenged pigs on days 5 to 12 and 14 to 16; isoprinosine did not alter this effect. Pseudorabies virus-infected pigs had leukocytosis (P less than 0.05) on days 12 and 16, primarily caused by neutrophilia. Concanavalin A-stimulated lymphocyte proliferation was decreased (P less than 0.06) in both PRV and ISO-PRV groups on day 12, compared with control pigs, but only in the PRV group on day 16. Pokeweed mitogen-stimulated lymphocyte proliferation was decreased (P less than 0.02) in ISO-PRV pigs on day 8 of the experiment. Interleukin-2 concentrations, pooled over all sampling days, were decreased (P less than 0.03) in pseudorabies virus-infected pigs. Viral excretion was not altered by isoprinosine treatment. These data suggest that pseudorabies virus infection decreased lymphocyte proliferative responses and interleukin-2 prodcution in pigs, and that isoprinosine did not mitigate these effects.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Studies of the immunomodulatory effects of low-level infection with Ostertagia ostertagi in calves
1989
Wiggin, C.J. | Gibbs, H.C.
Possible immunomodulation by low-level infection with Ostertagia ostertagi was studied in 4-month-old calves. Six groups of 4 calves each were subjected to the following regimes: group 1--nonparasitized controls; group 2--nonparasitized, but challenge exposed at day 64 with Brucella abortus strain 19 vaccine (BA) and at day 78 with IV administration of a soluble third-stage larval (L3) antigen preparation of O. ostertagi (OAG); group 3--nonparasitized, but challenge exposed at day 78 with 75 X 10(3) L3 of O ostertagi; group 4--continuously parasitized by weekly dosing with 30 X 10(3) L3 of O ostertagi; group 5--continuously parasitized by weekly dosing with 30 X 10(3) L3 of O ostertagi, then challenge exposed on day 64 with BA and on day 78 with IV inoculation of OAG; and group 6--continuously parasitized by weekly dosing with 30 X 10(3) L3 of O ostertagi, then challenge exposed on day 78 with 75 X 10(3) L3 of O ostertagi. Over the initial 10 weeks of the study, nonparasitized calves, (groups 1, 2, and 3) had higher body weight, blood lymphocyte (BL) response to phytohemagglutinin (PHA), and significantly (P less than 0.05) higher feed consumption and lymphocyte numbers, whereas parasitized calves (groups 4, 5, and 6) had higher BL responses to pokeweed mitogen (PWM) and significantly (P less than 0.05) higher neutrophil and eosinophil numbers, plasma pepsinogen (PP) values, and BL response to OAG. During the challenge-exposure period (weeks 10 through 13), group-5 calves had significantly (P less than 0.05) higher eosinophil numbers and PP values for week 11 (BA challenge exposure) and for week 13 (OAG challenge exposure) than did group-2 calves, but differences were not observed in BL responses to PHA, PWM, and OAG. Oral L3 challenge exposure at week 13 induced significantly (P less than 0.05) lower lymphocyte numbers, higher eosinophil numbers (P less than 0.05), and higher PP values, but lower BL response to PHA, PWM, and OAG in group-6, compared with group-3 calves. In continuously parasitized calves, comparison of IV OAG challenge exposure with oral L3 challenge exposure indicated that group-6 (L3) calves has significantly lower (P less than 0.05) lymphocyte numbers and higher PP values than did group-5 (OAG) calves. Results of ELISA revealed significantly (P less than 0.05) higher antibody titer to OAG in parasitized calves, compared with nonparasitized calves. Abomasal mucosal pathologic changes were most severe in the continuously parasitized calves. Calves of groups 4, 5, and 6 had thicker mucosae (edema), significantly (P less than 0.05) higher eosinophil numbers, and higher globule leukocyte and mast cell numbers in the fundic and pyloric regions than did calves of groups 1, 2, and 3. Calves of groups 4, 5, and 6 also had significantly (P less than 0.05) larger abomasal lymph node masses than did nonparasitized calves. In group-1 calves, nodes had the lowest mass. Differences were not observed among groups for lymphocyte responses to proliferative and suppressive assays performed on the abomasal lymph node lymphocytes.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Some effects of limited exercise on purpose-bred Beagles
1988
Campbell, S.A. | Hughes, H.C. | Griffin, H.E. | Landi, M.S. | Mallon, F.M.
Amendments to the Animal Welfare Act (PL 99-198) require that an exercise program for dogs be established by the attending veterinarian. A 6-week study was conducted to determine the effects of a moderate exercise program in purpose-bred Beagles. Sixteen male Beagles (4/group) were maintained as follows: (1) standard cage without exercise; (2) standard cage with individual exercise periods (35 minutes, 3 times/week); (3) large cage without exercise; and (4) standard cage with group-release exercise periods. Blood samples were collected for CBC, serum biochemical analysis including determination of serum cortisol concentration, and immune function (lymphocyte transformation assay). Group-released dogs interacted with each other during most of the exercise time. Fighting in these dogs occurred only during the third week. Dogs had little inclination to exercise when released along into the exercise area. Regardless of the size of the cage, dogs did not exercise unless human beings were present in the room. There were no significant differences in laboratory findings among dogs in the 4 groups. This moderate exercise program had no demonstrable effects. Similarly, continuous cage housing, without a formal exercise program, could not be determined to be detrimental to the physiologic or health status of dogs.
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