Abstract

A strain of SHR rats, which spontaneously develops hypertension and periarteritis nodosa, had a decreasing number of rosette-forming T cells in their thymuses and a progressive decline in cellular immune functions by aging. They were found to produce natural thymocytotoxic autoantibody (NTA) detected by a complement-dependent cytotoxicity test. This autoantibody occurred from 1 month of age and throughout life; the incidence was more than 60% of SHR rats at any age. Thymocytes from all six rat strains tested showed similarly high sensitivity to NTA but none of the strains tested produced NTA except the SHR strain. Rosette-forming thymocytes of WKA rats, which were separated by Ficoll gradient, showed much higher cytotoxic sensitivity to NTA than did whole thymocytes and nonrosetting thymocytes. The cytotoxicity of NTA was weak or negative for spleen cells, lymph node cells, bone marrow cells, and blood lymphocytes of WKA rats. However, the cytotoxic activity of NTA was completely absorbed with the thymus, spleen, lymph node cells, and brain homogenates and was partially absorbed with bone marrow cells, but not with liver and kidney homogenates. NTA in SHR rats was an IgM-globulin as determined by sensitivity to 2-ME treatment and by Sephadex G-200 column chromatography. These results suggest that NTA is responsible for the selective suppression of T-cell functions in SHR rats.

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