Styrene-induced immunomodulation in mice |
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Authors: | R K Dogra S Khanna S N Srivastava L J Shukla R Shanker |
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Affiliation: | Immunotoxicology Laboratory, Industrial Toxicology Research Centre, Lucknow, India. |
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Abstract: | Male mice given different oral doses (0.05, 0.03 or 0.02 x LD50/animal/day) of styrene (LD50 = 1 g/kg) daily for 5 days did not incite any overt toxicity in lymphoid organs or on hematologic parameters. At the tested dose levels styrene produced a mild reduction in the organ weight of adrenal and spleen and slight reduction in the cellular viability of lymph nodes. There was a dose-dependent suppression in the humoral immune response (IgM-producing PFCs of spleen and serum anti-SRBC HA titre) to SRBC. The proliferative response to the B-cell mitogen, LPS however revealed a significant increase in the incorporation of 3HT with middle and lowest doses of styrene. The results of cell-mediated immunity appeared somewhat unexpected and more complex as exposure resulted in a dose-dependent enhancement in the cutaneous DTH reaction to SRBC together with increased blastogenic response of splenic lymphocytes to phytohaemagglutinin (PHA). Additionally, there was significant impairment in the functional activity (NBT reduction, attachment and phagocytic indices) of nonadherent and adherent peritoneal exudate cells. Based on the present data the study identifies the immunotoxic potential of styrene and which acts differently on various arms of the rodent's immune system. |
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