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  • 1
    ISSN: 1365-2826
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Wistar male rats were injected s.c. with melatonin (30 μg) or vehicle, 1 h before lights off, for 11 days. Ten days after beginning melatonin treatment, rats received Freund’s complete adjuvant or its vehicle s.c., and after 2 days, they were sacrificed at six different time intervals throughout a 24-h cycle. The mitogenic effect of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and concanavalin A (Con A), the activity of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) and the relative size of lymphocyte subset populations were measured in submaxillary lymph nodes. In control rats, the mitogenic effects of LPS and Con A and ODC activity peaked during the afternoon. Injection of Freund’s adjuvant induced a 10-h shift in the diurnal rhythm of the mitogenic effect of LPS to attain maximal values at night. Melatonin pretreatment blunted the daily variations in the mitogenic activity of Con A or LPS and, when given to Freund’s adjuvant-injected rats, augmented mesor and amplitude of diurnal rhythm in ODC activity. Maxima in B cell number occurred at night whereas those of T and B-T cell number occurred during the afternoon. During the early phase of immunization tested, the number of B cells augmented and the amplitude of its diurnal rhythmicity increased both after immunization and following melatonin pretreatment. Maxima of 24-h rhythms in CD4+ and CD4+/CD8+ cell populations occurred during the afternoon while those of CD8+ cells occurred at late night. Melatonin significantly augmented CD4+ cell number and decreased CD8+ cell number; it therefore augmented the CD4+:CD8+ ratio. The results suggest that pretreatment with a pharmacological dose of melatonin exerts immunomodulating effects at an early, preclinical, phase of Freund’s adjuvant-induced arthritis in rats.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 0003-276X
    Keywords: Lymphocytes ; Macrophages ; Antigen-presenting cells ; Elasmobranchs ; Brain ; Immune responses ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Background: Previous studies have demonstrated the existence of lympho-haemopoietic tissue in the meninges and choroid plexuses of various primitive vertebrates, including the stingray Dasyatis akajei and in early human embryos. In the present study, we extend these results analyzing macrophage-lymphocyte cell clusters found in the floor of the hypothalamic ventricle of several specimens of elasmobranchs.Methods: After aseptical isolation of the brain from several specimens of smooth dogfish Triakis scyllia, cloudy dogfish Scyliorhinus torazame, gummy shark Mustelus manazo, and stingray Dasyatis akajei their hypothalamic regions were processed routinely by light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy.Results: The study of serial histological sections demonstrated that the macrophage-lymphocyte cell clusters proceeded from the meningeal lymphohaemopoietic tissue, reaching the ventricular lumen along large blood vessels. In this tissue, macrophages, different sized lymphocytes, lymphoblasts, granulocytes, monocytes, and developing and mature plasma cells were closely packed among a meshwork of fibroblastic reticular cell processes. It never invaded the brain parenchyma. A cell layer of glial elements and a continuous basement membrane interposed between the lymphoid tissue and the neural elements although some macrophages had migrated across the ependymal cell layer. In the ventricular lumen very irregular macrophages with long cell processes and containing abundant engulfed material of unknown origin formed big cell clusters with neighboring lymphocytes, lymphoblasts, and plasma cells, similar to those described during the immune response. Moreover, electron lucent cells which resembled the antigen-presenting cells of higher vertebrates established intimate surface cell contacts with the surrounding lymphocytes. In the third ventricle of several specimens of gummy shark, Mustelus manazo, morphologically similar cell clusters appeared but these were not connected to the meningeal lympho-haemopoietic tissue. No intraentricular cell aggregates were found in the stingray brain.Conclusions: Although we cannot rule out that these macrophage-lymphocyte cell clusters represent a permanent structure in the elasmobranch brain they rather seem to be only established after specific stimulation for preventing the entrance of noxious, foreign materials into the elasmobranch brain parenchyma. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
    Additional Material: 20 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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