6533b853fe1ef96bd12ac264

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Lymphocyte subpopulations in solvent-exposed workers.

D. V. SteldernU. BotzenhardtW. DenkhausH. Konietzkol

subject

AdultCellular immunityImmunity CellularLymphocytosismedicine.drug_classT cellLymphocytePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthAir Pollutants OccupationalBiologyMiddle AgedMonoclonal antibodymedicine.diseaseImmune systemmedicine.anatomical_structureImmunologymedicineSolventsHumansLymphocytesmedicine.symptomAplastic anemiaImmunodeficiency

description

To estimate the cellular immune response of workers highly exposed to mixtures of organic solvents, subpopulations of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) were analyzed. For this, the PBLs of nine floorers (aged 25–58 years, exposure time 8–35 years) were subsequently labelled with monoclonal antibodies OKT 4, OKT 8, OKT 11, anti-Leu 7 and anti-Leu 12. Analysis was made by a FACS IV cell sorter (Becton-Dickinson, USA). The control group consisted of matched pairs of healthy donors. In the exposed group we found a decrease in the OKT 11 (all) T cell fraction, a decrease in the OKT 4 helper cells, an increase in the anti-Leu 7 positive cells, mostly natural killer cells, an important increase in anti-Leu 12 labelled T cells, i.e., human B-lymphocytes, and no differences in the OKT8 suppressor cells. Total fluorescence intensity profiles between the exposed and the unexposed group did not differ, i.e., the marker density on the cell surfaces remained unchanged. Similar changes in lymphocyte subpopulations are found in states of immunodeficiency and immunogenetic forms of aplastic anemia, a disease whose etiological relationship may be due to long-term exposure to organic solvents.

10.1007/bf00381378https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/3949394