Effect of adrenalectomy on ethanol-associated changes in lymphocyte cell numbers and subpopulations in thymus, spleen, and gut-associated lymphoid tissues.

2000 
Abstract Consumption of ethanol (ETOH) by experimental animals and human beings is associated with elevated serum levels of corticosteroids. One of the most robust findings associated with ETOH consumption is a loss of lymphocytes from thymus and spleen, as well as from peripheral lymphoid organs to include mesenteric lymph nodes and Peyer’s patches, which are lymphoid organs associated with the gastrointestinal tract. To study the role of corticosteroids in loss of cells from thymus, spleen, and gut-associated lymphoid organs, adrenalectomized (ADX) or intact C57Bl/6 mice were fed a liquid diet containing ETOH (to supply 36% of calories as ETOH) or an isocaloric control diet with a pair-feeding protocol. Loss of lymphocytes from all lymphoid organs was associated closely with serum corticosterone levels in both ETOH-fed and pair-fed groups. ETOH-fed ADX animals showed much less cell loss than did ETOH-fed intact animals. However, there was still an association between ETOH consumption and cell loss when cell loss in ETOH-fed ADX animals was compared with that in ADX pair-fed and ADX chow-fed groups. In both intact and ADX animals ETOH consumption was associated with a loss of immature (CD4 + and CD8 + ) cells from the thymus. These data lead to the suggestion that corticosteroids are responsible for most of the cell loss from thymus, spleen, mesenteric lymph nodes, and Peyer’s patches in association with ETOH consumption. Some cell loss, however, is independent of corticosteroids. The data presented here also support the suggestion that cell loss from lymphoid organs could be the result of nutritional factors.
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