Acute emotional stress is shown to raise the level of malonic dialdehyde in the hypothalamus of August rats. After intraventricular administration of interleukin-l[3, the malonie dialdehyde level and the activity of antioxidant enzymes tended to rise selectively in the hypothalamus (but not in the sensorimotor cortex) of August, Wistar, and WAG rats. In the presence of this interleukin, acute emotional stress did not cause increases in lipid peroxidation products in the hypothalamus of August rats.
The antigen-presenting activity of B cells and expression of molecules involved in antigen presentation by B cells have been studied in patients with autoimmune thyroiditis (AIT). The disease is characterized by enhanced expression of the costimulatory molecule CD80 in naive B cells (CD19(+)CD27(-) cells) both ex vivo and under the conditions of polyclonal cell activation in a culture. Under in vitro conditions, antigen-loaded B cells have been shown to be capable of inducing proliferation of autologous CD4(+) cells, in particular, proliferation of autospecific T cells in patients with AIT. Given that an intense infiltration of thyroid tissue by B cells is a typical sign of AIT, the antigen-presenting activity of B cells appears to contribute to this pathology.
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