2 research outputs found
Studien in Mäusen über die Rolle des thymischen Hormones Thymulin in der Neonatalperiode als Reifungsfaktor für das neuroendokrine System
Cover and Table of Contents
Introduction
Hypothesis and Research Objectives
Animals, Materials and Methods
Experimental Results
Discussion
Future Directions
ReferencesThe thymic peptide thymulin was discovered, purified and sequenced in the
70s. In a series of early studies, thymulin was thoroughly characterized in
relation to its immunological actions. It was shown to be involved in several
aspects of intra- and extrathymic T-cell differentiation. Further studies
revealed that thymulin secretion was affected by a complex endocrine network
involving most adenohypophyseal and peripheral hormones, and that thymulin
itself strongly influences the neuroendocrine system. In the present doctoral
thesis anti-thymulin specific antibodies were generated in rabbits and
chickens. An ELISA for thymulin was set up using mammalian antibodies. Rabbit
antisera were specific for thymulin but chicken antibodies were found to
produce strong nonspecific interactions when used in ELISA. Long- (33 days)
and short- (7 days) term neonatal immunoneutralization studies on mice
employing the anti-thymulin antibodies raised in rabbits revealed a strong
reduction in the serum levels of most anterior pituitary hormones (LH, FSH,
PRL, TSH and GH) when the treated animals reached an adult age. Pituitary cell
populations were also affected by the treatment. Additionally, body weight
decreased and thymic cellularity increased in the thymulin-deprived animals.
We conclude that thymulin has a general facilitatory action on anterior
pituitary hormone secretion and that this thymic peptide plays a key role
during early life for the development of a proper neuroendocrine balance in
adult animals.Das thymische Peptid Thymulin wurde in den 70er Jahren entdeckt, purifiziert
und sequenziert. In einer Reihe von Studien wurde Thymulin eingehend
hinsichtlich seiner immunologischen Funktionen charakterisiert. Es wurde
gezeigt, dass es an zahlreichen Aspekten intra- und extrathymischer T-Zell-
Differenzierung beteiligt ist. Weitere Studien ergaben, dass die Sekretion von
Thymulin durch ein komplexes Netzwerk gesteuert wird, an dem adenohypophysäre
und periphere Hormone beteiligt sind, und dass Thymulin seinerseits sehr
starken Einfluss auf das neuroendokrine System hat. In der vorliegenden
Doktorarbeit wurden anti-Thymulin-spezifische Antikörper in Kaninchen und
Hühnern generiert. Ein ELISA für Thymulin wurde auf der Basis polyklonaler
Kaninchenantikörper entwickelt. Kaninchenseren stellten sich als spezifisch
für Thymulin heraus, wohingegen Hühnerantikörper starke unspezifische
Interaktionen im ELISA zeigten. Neonatale Langzeit- (33 Tage) und Kurzzeit- (7
Tage) Immunoneutralisierungs-Studien in Mäusen führten nach Erreichen des
Erwachsenenalters zu stark reduzierten Serumspiegeln adenohypophysärer Hormone
(LH, FSH, PRL, TSH, GH). Die Morphologie hypophysärer Zellen zeigte in diesem
Experiment ebenfalls Veränderungen. Außerdem waren in den Thymulin-defizienten
Tieren das Körpergewicht erniedrigt und der Zellgehalt des Thymus erhöht. Es
kann gefolgert werden, dass Thymulin eine generelle sekretionsfördernde
Wirkung auf die Adenohypophyse hat und dass dieses Peptid in der
Neonatalperiode eine Schlüsselrolle für die normale Entwicklung des späteren
neuroendokrinen Gleichgewichtes hat
Cholera ante portas - The re-emergence of cholera in Kinshasa after a ten-year hiatus.
International audienceBackground: Cholera is an endemic disease in certain well-defined areas in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The west of the country, including the mega-city Kinshasa, has been free of cases since mid 2001 when the last outbreak ended. Methods and Findings: We used routinely collected passive surveillance data to construct epidemic curves of the cholera cases and map the spatio-temporal progress of the disease during the first 47 weeks of 2011. We compared the spatial distribution of disease spread to that which occurred in the last cholera epidemic in Kinshasa between 1996 and 2001. To better understand previous determinants of cholera spread in this region, we conducted a correlation analysis to assess the impact of rainfall on weekly health zone cholera case counts between December 1998 and March 2001 and a Generalized Linear Model (GLM) regression analysis to identify factors that have been associated with the most vulnerable health zones within Kinshasa between October 1998 and June 1999. In February 2011, cholera reemerged in a region surrounding Kisangani and gradually spread westwards following the course of the Congo River to Kinshasa, home to 10 million people. Ten sampled isolates were confirmed to be Vibrio cholerae O1, biotype El Tor, serotype Inaba, resistant to trimethoprim-sulfa, furazolidone, nalidixic acid, sulfisoxaole, and streptomycin, and intermediate resistant to Chloramphenicol. An analysis of a previous outbreak in Kinshasa shows that rainfall was correlated with case counts and that health zone population densities as well as fishing and trade activities were predictors of case counts. CONCLUSION: Cholera is particularly difficult to tackle in the DRC. Given the duration of the rainy season and increased riverine traffic from the eastern provinces in late 2011, we expect further increases in cholera in the coming months and especially within the mega-city Kinshasa. We urge all partners involved in the response to remain alert.Didier Bompangue and Silvan Vesenbeckh contributed equally to this work. *corresponding author: Silvan Vesenbeckh, Harvard School of Public Health ([email protected])Didier Bompangue is Associate Professor in the Department of Microbiology (University of Kinshasa) andEpidemiologist in the DRC Ministry of Health. He was involved in the investigations of the described outbreak since February 2011