Exogenous interleukin-1 (IL-1), applied intraventricularly, has been reported to enhance slow wave sleep. Here, we demonstrate that endogenous interleukin-1-like activity and IL-1 beta of the cat CSF increases during sleep in comparison to wake.
oBJective: In NOD.H2 h4 mice, high dietary iodine intake has been known to cause Iodineaccelerated spontaneous Autoimmune thyroiditis (IsAt) via an unknown mechanism. the aim of the study was to examine whether the NOD.H2 h4 genetic background predisposes to enhanced iodine organification in thyroglobulin (tg), a target autoantigen in IsAt. DEsIGN: to avoid issues associated with an ongoing anti-tg antibody response, we assessed tg iodination levels in iodine-fed, b-cell deficient NOD.H2 h4 mice. Additionally, we tested whether humoral or cellular immune responses of iodine-fed NOD.H2 h4 mice are preferentially directed to tg with increased iodine content (I-tg) or known pathogenic tg peptides that contained iodine. rEsULts: the iodine content of tg was not significantly different between control (9.0±2.7 I atoms per monomer) and iodine-fed mice (10.9±0.3 I atoms per monomer). Furthermore, in iodine-fed NOD.H2 h4 mice developing IsAt, strong but equivalent serum IgG responses were detected to both tg or I-tg, whereas their lymphoid cells were stimulated weakly but equally well by tg or I-tg in vitro and did not show reactivity against a panel of five pathogenic tg peptides that contained iodine. cONcLUsIONs: the results suggest that development of IsAt in NOD.H2 h4 mice is not associated with enhanced iodine organification or differential b-or t-cell responses to iodinated determinants in tg.
Summary We have previously shown that iodotyrosyl formation within certain innocuous thyroglobulin (Tg) peptides confers on them immunopathogenic properties. In this report, we generated a panel of T‐cell hybridoma clones specific for the immunogenic 16 mer Tg peptide p179 (amino acids 179–94) or its iodinated analogue (I‐p179), with a view to examining the effects of a single iodine atom at the Y192 amino acid residue on T‐cell recognition. We found that the peptide p179 was subdominant, and its binding to both Ak and Ek molecules was not significantly influenced by iodine. T‐cell receptor (TCR) engagement was unaffected by the bulky iodine atom in two clones that responded to both analogues but it was sterically hindered in two other clones that recognized only p179. One clone was reactive only to I‐p179, suggesting that the iodine atom is an integral part of its TCR ligand. Truncation analysis localized the determinant seen by all clones within the 11 mer peptide p184 (amino acids 184–194), suggesting that the cross‐reactive clones were not activated by a minimal epitope lacking Y192 and that the negative influence of iodine was not the result of a flanking residue effect. These results demonstrate, at the clonal level, variable influences of a single iodine atom on the recognition of a single Tg peptide. Iodination of tyrosyl‐containing, immunopathogenic Tg peptides may have unpredictable effects at the polyclonal level, depending on the extent of iodination at the particular site, and the relative number or effector function of autoreactive T‐cell clones that are switched on or off by the neoantigenic determinant.
Thyroid hormone-binding (THB) Abs are frequently detected in autoimmune thyroid disorders but it is unknown whether they can exert immunoregulatory effects. We report that a THB mAb recognizing the 5′ iodine atom of the outer phenolic ring of thyroxine (T4) can block T cell recognition of the pathogenic thyroglobulin (Tg) peptide (2549–2560) that contains T4 at aa position 2553 (T4(2553)). Following peptide binding to the MHC groove, the THB mAb inhibited activation of the Ak-restricted, T4(2553)-specific, mouse T cell hybridoma clone 3.47, which does not recognize other T4-containing epitopes or noniodinated peptide analogues. Addition of the same THB mAb to T4(2553)-pulsed splenocytes largely inhibited specific activation of T4(2553)-primed lymph node cells and significantly reduced their capacity to adoptively transfer thyroiditis to naive CBA/J mice. These data demonstrate that some THB Abs can block recognition of iodine-containing Tg epitopes by autoaggressive T cells and support the view that such Abs may influence the development or maintenance of thyroid disease.
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