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. 1993;24(3):291-303.

Suppressive effect of serum from pigs and dogs fed a diet deficient in vitamin E and selenium on lymphocyte proliferation

Affiliations
  • PMID: 8343814

Suppressive effect of serum from pigs and dogs fed a diet deficient in vitamin E and selenium on lymphocyte proliferation

M Lessard et al. Vet Res. 1993.

Abstract

The effect of sera collected from either pigs or dogs previously fed a vitamin E (vit E)- and selenium (Se)-deficient diet on in vitro lymphocyte blastogenesis response to mitogens was studied. Porcine sera were obtained from pigs used in 2 different trials. In I trial, 4-wk-old pigs received either a basal diet deficient in vit E and Se or the basal diet supplemented with Vit E, Se or Vit E and Se. Pigs were maintained on their respective diet for 25 d. Canine sera were collected from pups maintained on a deficient diet for 8 wk. Four dogs and 4 pigs maintained on a commercial diet were used as donors of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL). The addition of sera from pigs or dogs maintained on a vit E- and Se-deficient diet markedly suppressed both porcine and canine PBL response to mitogens. Porcine PBL blastogenesis was also suppressed when porcine or canine sera were added 8, 24 or 48 h after the beginning of the incubation period to culture containing 1% of fetal bovine serum (FBS). However, the suppressive effect caused by porcine sera was less severe than the one due to canine sera. Addition of 1% FBS in the cultures was sufficient to eliminate the suppression caused by the presence of sera from pigs fed a vit E- and Se-deficient diet. Other attempts to restore the lymphocyte response to mitogens by the addition of indomethacin, diethylcarbamazine or eicosatetraynoic acid, inhibitors of prostaglandin and/or leukotriene synthesis, were not successful. Because of the severe suppression caused by sera from animals maintained on a vit E- and Se-deficient diet on the in vitro response of lymphocytes to mitogenic stimulations, it is very important to take precautions to avoid such deficiency. In vivo suppression of immunocompetent cells to antigenic stimulations may impair the capacity of the host to control infections.

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