Abstract
Exposure to aversive events or Stressors modulates various aspects of immune function. We have previously reported that exposure to an acute Stressor, inescapable tail shock (IS), resulted in a shift in T cell subpopulations in rat mesenteric lymph nodes but not in cervical lymph nodes (Fleshner et al. (1992) J. Neuroimmunol. 41, 131–142). The mesenteric CD4 + CD8 + ratio was increased immediately after exposure to IS and was due primarily to an increase in the percent of CD4 + cells. The present experiments were designed to determine the relationship between the IS-associated phenotypic shift and its significance in the function of CD4 + T cells. The function assessed was the in vitro proliferative response to alloantigens coded for by the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC). Using the mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR), we report that exposure to IS resulted in a decrease in the MLR response of cells from both cervical and mesenteric lymph nodes. Depletion of macrophages (nylon wool adherent cells) eliminated the IS-induced reduction and co-culture of macrophages (irradiation-insensitive cells) from shocked rats produced the suppression. One interpretation of these data is that exposure to IS resulted in the activation of macrophages and the release of a suppressive factor which reduced the MLR response of peripheral lymph node lymphocytes.
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