Abstract

The present immunohistochemical study deals with dynamic alteration of T-cell subsets in the oviduct sex-hormone-treated chickens. Monoclonal antibodies (CT3, CT4, and CT8) specific for the chicken homologues of CD3, CD4, and CD8 were used in estrogen- or progesterone-treated chickens. In control animals, no lymphocytes appeared throughout the oviduct until 4 weeks of age. When 7-day-old chickens were injected with either diethylstilbestrol (DES) or (DES) plus progesterone, T cells immunoreactive for CT3 first infiltrated the oviduct at 12 hr after the hormone treatment. Their frequency of occurrence rose from 48 to 96 hr. Subsequently, CT3+ cells in the magnum declined in number per area coincident with the proliferation of albuminous glands in the lamina propria, while in the vagina no decline of T cells was observed. The population of T-cell subsets in the lamina propria of both the magnum and vagina was significantly higher in the DES-treated chickens than in DES plus progesterone-treated chickens. Among T-cell subsets CT8+ cells were more numerous than CT4+ cells throughout the study, this relative frequency being shared by normal adults. Depopulation of lymphocytes from the thymus, spleen and cecal tonsil, their mobilization to the circulating blood, and subsequent dynamic infiltration into the oviduct suggested that the sex hormones induced the traffic of T cells from the lymphoid organs into the oviduct.

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