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. 1998 Dec;10(12):1917-22.
doi: 10.1093/intimm/10.12.1917.

Kinetics of intraocular cytokines in the suppression of experimental autoimmune uveoretinitis by type I IFN

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Kinetics of intraocular cytokines in the suppression of experimental autoimmune uveoretinitis by type I IFN

A A Okada et al. Int Immunol. 1998 Dec.

Abstract

The systemic administration of IFN-alpha/beta was previously found to suppress inflammation in rats with experimental autoimmune uveoretinitis (EAU); however, an effect on the systemic immune response was not identified. In order to investigate an immunological basis for suppression at the intraocular level, rats immunized with interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP) were administered daily intramuscular injections of 10(5) IU IFN-alpha/beta and cytokines were measured by ELISA in intraocular extracts prepared by ultrasonification at various timepoints throughout the course of EAU. In control EAU, intraocular concentrations of IFN-gamma were found to be non-detectable on day 8 before the onset of inflammation, significantly elevated on day 12 at peak inflammation (182+/-106 pg/ml), then non-detectable again on day 16 after inflammation had begun to subside. In contrast, intraocular IFN-gamma in IFN-alpha/beta-treated rats remained non-detectable or low at all timepoints. Measurement of intraocular IL-2 revealed no difference between the two groups of rats. Intraocular IL-4 concentrations were elevated in rats treated with IFN-alpha/beta, although this cytokine was also detected in the same range in controls as well as normal rats. Finally, intraocular IL-10 was non-detectable on day 8, significantly elevated at peak inflammation on day 12 (588+/-139 pg/ml), then decreased to low levels on day 16 in control EAU rats, while remaining non-detectable or low in IFN-alpha/beta-treated rats. These results suggest that acute inflammation in IRBP-induced EAU in rats involves both IFN-gamma and IL-10 at the local intraocular level, and that systemic administration of IFN-alpha/beta inhibits EAU via a mechanism that involves suppression of both cytokines.

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