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The Journal of Immunology, 1976, 117: 1878-1882.
Copyright © 1976 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.

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Role of T Lymphocytes in Adjuvant Arthritis

I. Evidence for the Regulatory Function of Thymus-Derived Cells in the Induction of the Disease1

Kohji Kayashima2, Toshitaka Koga3 and Kaoru Onoue

Department of Biochemistry, Kyushu University School of Dentistry, Fukuoka 812, Japan

Abstract

Rats of Wistar King Aptekman (WKA) were thymectomized at 4 weeks of age and injected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis wax D 6 weeks after the operation to induce adjuvant arthritis. The development of this disease was strikingly enhanced by this treatment. Further experiments showed that a 4- to 6-week interval between thymectomy and wax D injection was necessary to show the enhancing effect. Such enhancement by thymectomy was also shown in rats of another strain, Sprague-Dawley (SD). The enhancing effect of thymectomy was abolished when thymocytes of normal syngeneic rats were transferred to thymectomized rats 7 days before the wax D inoculation. Furthermore, severe arthritis was also produced in WKA rats that were pretreated with low dose (200 R) whole body irradiation, but not in those treated with higher doses (400 to 700 R). These results seem to indicate that the enhancing effect is brought about by selective depletion of a certain population of T lymphocytes. The population depleted may be thymus dependent, short-lived and radiosensitive, the properties of which agree with those known for suppressor T lymphocytes. Thus, it appears that thymus-derived cells could normally exert a regulatory effect on the development of adjuvant arthritis which might render these rat strains relatively less susceptible to this disease.

Footnotes

1 This research was supported by grants from the Ministry of Education of Japan (No. 948178 and 911213).

2 Research Fellow from the 1st Department of Surgery, Kyushu University School of Medicine, Fukuoka 812, Japan.

3 To whom reprint requests should be addressed.







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