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Title: Acceleration of age-associated immune decline and mortality by early repeated administration of bestatin to C57BL/6 mice. Author: Bruley-Rosset M, Payelle B, Rappaport H. Journal: J Biol Response Mod; 1986 Apr; 5(2):176-90. PubMed ID: 3488372. Abstract: The effect of chronic treatment with an immunostimulating agent, bestatin, on age-associated immune decline was assessed in C57BL/6 mice. Animals were given weekly doses of bestatin (100 micrograms/mouse, i.p.) from 7 months of age until death, and immune responses (natural killer cell activity, T cell cytotoxicity in vitro and in vivo, delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction, lymphoproliferative responses to mitogens, production of interleukin-2, macrophage functions) were tested at 11, 15, and 20 months. Most of the functions were reduced in 15-17-month-old mice, but evidence of reduced macrophage activities appeared only in limiting conditions (low lipopolysaccharide stimulation for interleukin-1 production and low concentration of macrophages in the cytostatic test). Bestatin administration produced a transient increase in natural killer (NK) cell activity and in vivo T cell cytotoxicity, followed (15-20 months of age) by a depression of NK and T cell-mediated responses. Only macrophage functions were stimulated in 20-month-old bestatin-treated mice. This unresponsiveness coincides with an accelerated mortality of bestatin-treated mice and a significant increase in the number of spontaneous tumor-bearing animals. The stimulation of T cells by bestatin seems to be mediated by a primary activation of macrophages to release immune mediators. Several reasons for the bestatin-induced immunodepression can be postulated including a high dose of bestatin, leading to toxicity or unresponsiveness; induction of suppressor cells; and overproliferation of T cells due to the mitogenic activity of bestatin, which may act as a promoting factor for tumor development.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]