Abstract

Recently, we have shown that administration of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) to corticosteroid-treated Crohn's disease (CD) patients increased the peripheral blood natural killer (NK) cell activity which was suppressed by the corticosteroids. To elucidate this observation we analysed the in vitro effect of budesonide, prednisolone, cortisol, and ACTH on NK cells of healthy volunteers and corticosteroid-treated CD patients. Incubation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMNC) from healthy volunteers during the cytotoxicity assay caused a dose-dependent inhibition of NK cell activity by the three corticosteroids, while ACTH had hardly any effect. Pre-incubation for 18 h with high and low inhibiting concentrations also showed a significant inhibiting effect on NK cell activity of the corticosteroids. The percentage of CD56+ NK cells tended to increase after pre-incubation with a high inhibiting concentration of budesonide, prednisolone, and cortisol. Incubation of budesonide- or prednisolone-suppressed PBMNC from healthy volunteers and CD patients, with ACTH and/or cortisol, to mimic the in vivo situation, did not restore the corticosteroid-induced suppression of NK cell activity. The increase of the budesonide- or prednisolone-suppressed NK cell activity after in vivo administration of ACTH to the CD patients is therefore probably not a direct effect of cortisol or ACTH. Presumably other factors like cytokines and/or neurohormones must be involved in the in vivo interaction between corticosteroids, ACTH, and NK cells.

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