Abstract

An altered immunoendocrine feedback regulation within the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis may modulate the pathogenesis of an avian autoimmune'disease. To date studies have been hampered by a lack of reliable, specific, and sensitive methods for determining adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) in chickens. The present study describes the determination of ACTH in plasma of chickens with a commercial radioimmunoassay, the antibody of which binds to the midregion of human ACTH 1-39. The chickens, kept on a 12-hr day and 12-hr night shift with artificial light, showed changes in plasma ACTH concentrations during the light phase with maximum values 8 hr after the light was turned on. ACTH was not measurable after treatment with dexamethasone. Intravenous administration of supernatants from concanavalin A-stimulated spleen cells increased basal plasma ACTH concentrations more than 20-fold within 1 hr. This increase in plasma ACTH was higher and longer lasting in UCD 200 chickens, an animal model for scleroderma, compared with outbred and inbred normal White Leghorn chickens.

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