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Age-Associated Remodeling of Thymopoiesis: Role for Gonadal Hormones and Catecholamines

Само за регистроване кориснике
2008
Аутори
Leposavić, Gordana
Perišić, Milica
Чланак у часопису (Објављена верзија)
Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документу
Апстракт
The present review summarizes recent data on age-related thymic changes termed thymic involution, and highlights the putative role of perturbances in extrathymical and, possibly, intrathymical production of gonadal steroids and catecholamines in this process. Thymic involution has been envisaged as an extremely complex process involving multifactorial mechanisms along the bone marrow-thymic axis that accounts for the major manifestations of immunosenescence. These mechanisms include basic cell aging processes (for example, cell replication and programmed cell death) and processes unique to the immune system (such as generation of the T cell receptor repertoire and control of potentially autoreactive cells). Given that the onset of age-associated thymic involution coincides with the rise in gonadal steroid levels at puberty, a causal link between these events has been suggested. It has been shown that: (1) peripubertal gonadectomy causes substantial decrease in the level of noradrenalin...e in adult male and female thymus and (2) catecholamines, acting via alpha- and beta-adrenoceptor, produce suppressive effects on the thymic cellularity and production of both effector and regulatory T cells. Furthermore, the possibility that gonadal steroids contribute to thymic involution is discussed in this paper. In light of recent data indicating that effects of gonadal hormone deprivation on the thymic cellularity and function are long lasting but transitory, a putative role for the intrathymic sex steroid/catecholamine production in assuring the organ involution, under conditions of their limited supply by extrathymic sources, is also considered. Copyright (C) 2008 S. Karger AG, Basel

Кључне речи:
Thymus / Involution / Thymopoiesis / Sex steroids / Catecholamines
Извор:
Neuroimmunomodulation, 2008, 15, 4-6, 290-322
Издавач:
  • Karger, Basel
Финансирање / пројекти:
  • Неуроендокрина модулација имунског одговора: улога симпато-адреномедуларног система (RS-145049)

DOI: 10.1159/000156473

ISSN: 1021-7401

PubMed: 19047807

WoS: 000261564000010

Scopus: 2-s2.0-57149085680
[ Google Scholar ]
37
36
URI
http://intor.torlakinstitut.com/handle/123456789/268
Колекције
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
Институција/група
Torlak
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Leposavić, Gordana
AU  - Perišić, Milica
PY  - 2008
UR  - http://intor.torlakinstitut.com/handle/123456789/268
AB  - The present review summarizes recent data on age-related thymic changes termed thymic involution, and highlights the putative role of perturbances in extrathymical and, possibly, intrathymical production of gonadal steroids and catecholamines in this process. Thymic involution has been envisaged as an extremely complex process involving multifactorial mechanisms along the bone marrow-thymic axis that accounts for the major manifestations of immunosenescence. These mechanisms include basic cell aging processes (for example, cell replication and programmed cell death) and processes unique to the immune system (such as generation of the T cell receptor repertoire and control of potentially autoreactive cells). Given that the onset of age-associated thymic involution coincides with the rise in gonadal steroid levels at puberty, a causal link between these events has been suggested. It has been shown that: (1) peripubertal gonadectomy causes substantial decrease in the level of noradrenaline in adult male and female thymus and (2) catecholamines, acting via alpha- and beta-adrenoceptor, produce suppressive effects on the thymic cellularity and production of both effector and regulatory T cells. Furthermore, the possibility that gonadal steroids contribute to thymic involution is discussed in this paper. In light of recent data indicating that effects of gonadal hormone deprivation on the thymic cellularity and function are long lasting but transitory, a putative role for the intrathymic sex steroid/catecholamine production in assuring the organ involution, under conditions of their limited supply by extrathymic sources, is also considered. Copyright (C) 2008 S. Karger AG, Basel
PB  - Karger, Basel
T2  - Neuroimmunomodulation
T1  - Age-Associated Remodeling of Thymopoiesis: Role for Gonadal Hormones and Catecholamines
EP  - 322
IS  - 4-6
SP  - 290
VL  - 15
DO  - 10.1159/000156473
UR  - conv_222
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Leposavić, Gordana and Perišić, Milica",
year = "2008",
abstract = "The present review summarizes recent data on age-related thymic changes termed thymic involution, and highlights the putative role of perturbances in extrathymical and, possibly, intrathymical production of gonadal steroids and catecholamines in this process. Thymic involution has been envisaged as an extremely complex process involving multifactorial mechanisms along the bone marrow-thymic axis that accounts for the major manifestations of immunosenescence. These mechanisms include basic cell aging processes (for example, cell replication and programmed cell death) and processes unique to the immune system (such as generation of the T cell receptor repertoire and control of potentially autoreactive cells). Given that the onset of age-associated thymic involution coincides with the rise in gonadal steroid levels at puberty, a causal link between these events has been suggested. It has been shown that: (1) peripubertal gonadectomy causes substantial decrease in the level of noradrenaline in adult male and female thymus and (2) catecholamines, acting via alpha- and beta-adrenoceptor, produce suppressive effects on the thymic cellularity and production of both effector and regulatory T cells. Furthermore, the possibility that gonadal steroids contribute to thymic involution is discussed in this paper. In light of recent data indicating that effects of gonadal hormone deprivation on the thymic cellularity and function are long lasting but transitory, a putative role for the intrathymic sex steroid/catecholamine production in assuring the organ involution, under conditions of their limited supply by extrathymic sources, is also considered. Copyright (C) 2008 S. Karger AG, Basel",
publisher = "Karger, Basel",
journal = "Neuroimmunomodulation",
title = "Age-Associated Remodeling of Thymopoiesis: Role for Gonadal Hormones and Catecholamines",
pages = "322-290",
number = "4-6",
volume = "15",
doi = "10.1159/000156473",
url = "conv_222"
}
Leposavić, G.,& Perišić, M.. (2008). Age-Associated Remodeling of Thymopoiesis: Role for Gonadal Hormones and Catecholamines. in Neuroimmunomodulation
Karger, Basel., 15(4-6), 290-322.
https://doi.org/10.1159/000156473
conv_222
Leposavić G, Perišić M. Age-Associated Remodeling of Thymopoiesis: Role for Gonadal Hormones and Catecholamines. in Neuroimmunomodulation. 2008;15(4-6):290-322.
doi:10.1159/000156473
conv_222 .
Leposavić, Gordana, Perišić, Milica, "Age-Associated Remodeling of Thymopoiesis: Role for Gonadal Hormones and Catecholamines" in Neuroimmunomodulation, 15, no. 4-6 (2008):290-322,
https://doi.org/10.1159/000156473 .,
conv_222 .

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