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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Long-term in vivo administration of glucocorticoid hormones attenuates their capacity to accelerate in vitro proliferation of rat splenic T cells.

Previous work has shown that glucocorticoids accelerate splenic T cell proliferation in vitro. To test whether chronic exposure to high levels of glucocorticoids in vivo would affect this accelerating effect, we offered adrenalectomized rats a high dose of corticosterone (CORT; 150 microg/ml in saline), a physiological replacement dose of CORT (15 microg/ml in saline), or saline to drink. We also included a group of sham-adrenalectomized rats. After 1 wk of treatment, splenic lymphocytes of these animals were cultured in the presence or the absence of 1000 nm CORT. The central finding was that the CORT-evoked acceleration of the proliferative response in vitro was attenuated in splenic T cells from animals that had received the high-dose CORT treatment in vivo. This observation could not be explained by changes in IL-2 levels in culture supernatants, the cellular composition of the spleens, or an altered glucocorticoid receptor expression in T cells. As a candidate mechanism, we identified the abrogation of a CORT-evoked enhancement of IL-2 receptor expression. This finding underscores the pivotal role of the IL-2 receptor in the modulation of cellular immunity by glucocorticoids. We conclude that the attenuated acceleration of T cell proliferation after long-term exposure to elevated glucocorticoid levels may underlie the well-known impairment of immune function under chronic stress.[1]

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